Abstract

In recent years, the growing electric vehicle market has increased the need for cost efficient and high energy materials for batteries drastically. Tin and tin oxide materials bear great potential as anode materials for Li-Ion batteries due to low cost and high theoretical capacity. Nevertheless, the development of commercial tin anodes has so far been hindered due to several drawbacks related to high volume expansion during operation leading to fast cell degradation. To circumvent these issues, nanostructured electrodes can be applied to mitigate volume changes. Typically, the production process of such electrodes is challenging, leading to high cost and issues in terms of scalability. Electrochemical processes, such as the electrolytic oxidation of tin, has been found a promising alternative to fabricate nanostructured electrodes. The additive-free tin oxide anodes obtained from this process exhibit high gravimetric and volumetric capacity, excellent rate capability as well as promising cycle life. The morphology and microstructure have high impact on the rate capability and cycling stability of tin oxide anodes. Since structural properties can be precisely adjusted by controlling the electrochemical oxidation process, a deeper understanding of the structure-property relationship is needed to optimize the production process and pave the way for commercialization.Herein an in-depth characterization of nanostructured tin oxide anodes formed by electrochemical oxidation is presented. The rate capability and the cycling stability are investigated by means of electrochemical measurements in battery cells. Operando electrochemical dilatometry is used to investigate the thickness change of the anodes during cycling (cell breathing). In-situ XRD measurements are applied to elucidate the reaction mechanism. The anodes are carefully analyzed by SEM/EDS at different state of lithiation to understand the impact of volume changes on the inner porosity and morphology. Finally, the cycling stability of tin oxide anodes is improved by applying an electrochemical prelithiation step. Therefore, the impact of different prelithiation regimes on the cycling stability is evaluated in full cells. The results contribute to the understanding of electrochemical behavior of nanostructured tin oxide anodes and the derivation of optimal design criteria adjusted by electrochemical surface engineering.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call