Despite the high demand for accurate electrochemical simulations tools that can compute the d.c. (charge and discharge), a.c. (i.e. electrochemical impedance spectroscopy), and transient characteristics of electrochemical devices, there is currently a lack of such simulation environments in the literature. Most often, the different research groups and institutions are writing their own custom simulators that usually work only for specific battery configurations and chemistries. Even more advanced commercial simulators, such as Comsol Multiphysics, have a few modules that can simulate batteries, however, these modules can simulate only specific chemistries such as Li-ion or Li-air batteries and do not have a more general electrochemical device simulator that can simulate any general, user-designed device.In this presentation, we summarize our efforts to build such a tool, starting from the numerical implementation of the transport models to problems associated with the discretization and numerical solution of transport equations. We focus on how to design a unified framework for designing electrolytes, modeling ion transport in the electrolyte and electron transport in the electron conductive materials, and interface phenomena such as double layer effects, SEI layers, and the multitude of possible chemical and electrochemical reactions that can take place once the system is designed. In our tool, the transport in the electrolyte is governed by a modified concentrated solution theory written in the form of a generalized Nernst-Planck model. The a.c. analysis is performed by linearizing the discretized system of differential equations and using the linear perturbations theory on the finite element grid. More details about the formulation of the mathematical model, state variables, electrochemical reactions, microstructure modeling, and numerical implementation will be discussed at the conference. Specific examples for the simulation of Li-ion, Li-air, Li-S and other Li-based systems (symmetric and asymmetric cells) will also be presented.
Read full abstract