Abstract

Characterization of the rate and quality of ultrafast-laser ablation of Li-ion battery (LIB) electrode materials is presented for a collection of common and next-generation electrodes. Laser ablated micro-structures on the surface of LIB electrodes have been shown to provide dramatic enhancement of high-rate capability and electrode wetting. However, industrial adoption is hampered by a lack of data enabling informed choice of laser parameters and predicting process throughput. This work bridges this gap by providing characterization of the ablation process at more laser parameters (laser fluence and number of pulses used) than are currently available in the literature. Further, we expand on previous graphite and lithium iron phosphate (LFP) ablation work by extending ablation characterization to new LIB materials, providing high data resolution and adopting new characterization metrics which are relevant for industrial application of this technology. Ablated pores are characterized by their ablated depth, volume, and how the depth and volume ablation rate changes as a function of pore depth. Finally, we provide a detailed characterization of the morphology of laser ablated micro-structures which informs how material and laser parameters affect the quality of laser-processed electrodes.

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