Abstract

Preparing aqueous silicon slurries in presence of a low-pH buffer improves the cycle life of silicon electrodes considerably because of higher reversibility of the alloying process and higher resilience towards volume changes during (de)alloying. While the positive effects of processing at low pH have been demonstrated repeatedly, there are gaps in understanding of the buffer’s role during the slurry preparation and the effect of buffer residues within the electrode during cycling. This study uses a combination of soft and hard x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to investigate the silicon particle interface after aqueous processing in both pH-neutral and citrate-buffered environments. Further, silicon electrodes are investigated after ten cycles in half-cells to identify the processing-dependant differences in the surface layer composition. By tuning the excitation energy between 100 eV and 7080 eV, a wide range of probing depths were sampled to vertically map the electrode surface from top to bulk. The results demonstrate that the citrate-buffer becomes an integral part of the surface layer on Si particles and is, together with the electrode binder, part of an artificial solid-electrolyte interphase that is created during the electrode preparation and drying.

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