Abstract

Electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance coupled with dissipation (EQCM-D) is employed to investigate the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation and Li insertion/deinsertion into thin film electrodes of tin. Based on the frequency change we find that the initial SEI formation process is rapid before Li insertion but varies significantly with increasing concentration of the additive fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC) in the electrolyte. The extent of dissipation, which represents the film rigidity, increases with cycle number, reflecting film thickening and softening. Dissipation values are almost twice as large in the baseline electrolyte (1.2 M LiPF6 in 3:7 wt % ethylene carbonate:ethyl methyl carbonate), indicating the film in baseline electrolyte is roughly twice as soft as in the FEC-containing cells. More importantly, we detail how quantitative data about mass, thickness, shear elastic modulus, and shear viscosity in a time-resolved manner can be obtained from the EQCM-D response. These parameters were extracted from the frequency and dissipation results at multiple harmonics using the Sauerbrey and Voigt viscoelastic models. From these modeled results we show the dynamic mass changes for each half cycle. We also demonstrate that different amounts of FEC additive influence the SEI formation behavior and result in differences in the estimated mass, shear modulus and viscosity. After three cycles, the film in baseline electrolyte exhibits a 1.2 times larger mass change compared with the film in the FEC-containing electrolyte. The shear elastic modulus of films formed in the presence of FEC is larger than in the baseline electrolyte at early stages of lithiation. Also with lithiation is a marked increase in film viscosity, which together point to a much stiffer and more homogeneous SEI formed in the presence of FEC.

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