Abstract

Silicon (Si) is a promising high-capacity material for lithium-ion batteries; however, its limited reversibility hinders commercial adoption. Approaches such as particle and crystallite size reduction, introduction of conductive carbon, and use of different electrolyte solvents have been explored to overcome these electrochemical limitations. Herein, operando isothermal microcalorimetry (IMC) is used to probe the influence of silicon particle size, electrode composition, and electrolyte additives fluoroethylene carbonate and vinylene carbonate on the heat flow during silicon lithiation. The IMC data are complemented by X-ray photoelectron and Raman spectroscopies to elucidate differences in solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) composition. Nanosized (∼50 nm, n-Si) and micrometer-sized (∼4 μm, μ-Si) silicon electrodes are formulated with and without amorphous carbon and electrochemically lithiated in ethylene carbonate (EC), fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC), or vinylene carbonate (VC) based electrolytes. Notably, n-Si electrodes generate 53-61% more normalized heat relative to their μ-Si counterparts, consistent with increased surface area and electrode/electrolyte reactivity. Introduction of amorphous carbon significantly alters the heat flow profile where multiple exothermic peaks and increased normalized heat dissipation are observed for all electrolyte types. Notably, the VC-containing electrolyte demonstrates the greatest normalized heat dissipation of the electrode compositions tested showing as much as a 50% increase compared to the EC or FEC counterparts. The results are relevant to the understanding of silicon negative electrode function in the presence of electrolyte additives and provide insight relative to silicon containing cell reactivity and safety.

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