Abstract

A constrained compression test is developed to replicate the mechanical state of a lithium filament within a solid state battery. Lithium microspheres are compressed between parallel quartz plates into a pancake shape of thickness on the order of 15 µm. Full adhesion with no slip exists between the lithium and platens, and the attendant mechanical constraint implies that the average pressure on the pancake-shaped specimens increases with increasing aspect ratio of radius to height. In addition to mechanical constraint, a thickness-dependant size effect is observed whereby the apparent flow strength of the lithium increases from 0.7 MPa in the bulk to 2.0 MPa at a thickness of 15 µm. The lithium deforms in a power-law creeping manner at room temperature, and to simplify interpretation of the results, the relative velocity of the loading platens is adjusted to ensure that the true compressive strain rate is held fixed at 10−3 s−1. Additional measurements of lithium flow strength are obtained by subjecting the pancake-shaped specimens to simple shear. The size effect under shear loading is comparable to that in constrained compression. The observed size effect for lithium is consistent with that reported in the literature for lithium in indentation tests and in single pillar compression tests. Finally, the size effect of lithium in the power law creep regime is compared with that for rate-independent plasticity (for copper).

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