LITHIUM METAL BATTERIES HAVING ANODE-FREE CURRENT COLLECTORS
20220407078 · 2022-12-22
Inventors
- Venkatasubramanian VISWANATHAN (Pittsburgh, PA, US)
- Vikram PANDE (Pittsburgh, PA, US)
- Yet-Ming CHIANG (Pittsburgh, PA, US)
Cpc classification
H01M10/0525
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
The invention comprises an anode-free lithium metal cell having an anode-side current collector composed of lithium, a lithium alloy or lithium-containing compound or a transition metal having a lithium or lithium alloy or lithium-containing compound surface coating, to provide a specific energy of the cell of 350 Wh/kg or greater.
Claims
1. An anode-free lithium battery comprising: a cathode having a cathode current collector, an anode current collector; and a layer of separator/electrolyte disposed between the cathode and the anode current collector; wherein the anode current collector is a composition having a lithium adsorption energy between −0.1 eV and 0.1 eV.
2. The battery of claim 1 wherein the composition of the anode current collector is a lithium alloy or a lithium compound
3. The battery of claim 1 wherein the battery has a specific energy of 350 Wh/kg or greater.
4. An anode-free lithium battery comprising: a cathode having a cathode current collector, an anode current collector; and a layer of separator/electrolyte disposed between the cathode and the anode current collector; wherein the anode current collector is a composition having a lithium diffusion energy between 0 eV and 0.1 eV.
5. The battery of claim 4 wherein the composition of the anode current collector is a lithium alloy or a lithium compound.
6. The battery of claim 4 wherein the battery has a specific energy of 350 Wh/kg or greater.
7. An anode-free lithium battery comprising: a cathode having a cathode current collector, an anode current collector; and a layer of separator/electrolyte disposed between the cathode and the anode current collector; wherein the anode current collector is a layer of a transition metal having a surface layer of a composition having a lithium adsorption energy between −0.1 eV and 0.1 eV.
8. The battery of claim 7 wherein the transition metal is copper.
9. The battery of claim 8 wherein the composition of the surface layer is a lithium alloy or a lithium compound.
10. The battery of claim 7 wherein the battery has a specific energy of 350 Wh/kg or greater.
11. An anode-free lithium battery comprising: a cathode having a cathode current collector, an anode current collector; and a layer of separator/electrolyte disposed between the cathode and the anode current collector; wherein the anode current collector is a layer of a transition metal having a surface layer of a composition having a lithium diffusion energy between 0 eV and 0.1 eV.
12. The battery of claim 11 wherein the transition metal is copper.
13. The battery of claim 12 wherein the composition of the surface layer is a lithium alloy or a lithium compound.
14. The battery of claim 11 wherein the battery has a specific energy of 350 Wh/kg or greater.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023] There are two possible approaches for an anode-free design: (i) replace copper as current collector completely or (ii) apply a coating of material on top of copper. As shown in
[0024] The invention thus focuses on the use of other current collector candidates that out-perform Cu. A material must possess the following necessary properties, in addition to others, for use as a current collector in anode free batteries: (a) High electronic conductivity; (b) stable against corrosion; (c) Li nucleation potential leading to 2D growth; and (d) fast surface diffusion of Li on the surface.
[0025] In some embodiments of the invention described herein, lithium or a lithium-alloy is used as a current collector to develop cells with specific energy greater than, but not limited to, about 400 Wh/kg. In some embodiments, the invention described herein includes the use of binary and ternary lithium alloys, including, but not limited to, lithium-zinc, lithium-aluminum, lithium-boron, lithium-cadmium, lithium-silver, lithium-silicon, lithium-lead, lithium-tin, lithium-germanium, lithium-selenium, lithium-tellurium, lithium-arsenic, lithium-antimony, lithium-bismuth, lithium-thallium, lithium-indium, lithium-gallium, and lithium magnesium as current collectors for anode-free batteries, which can lead to high specific energies, low nucleation overpotentials, better rate capability and better control over dendrite in electrolytes. In other embodiments, Li-alloys comprising any number of different elements may be used.
[0026] The high electronic conductivity constraint restricts possible materials to metals and Li-alloys. When cost and abundance are also considered, the list of materials narrows down to Na, K, Cu, Fe, Ti, Ni, Cr, V, Mo, W, Zr, Mn as the transition metal elements and Li—Zn, Li—Al, Li—Ga, Li—B, Li—Si, Li—Sn, Li—Pb, Li—Cd, Li—Mg, Li—Ca, Li—Sr, Li—Se, Li—Te, Li—Tl, Li—In, Li—Bi, Li—Sb, Li—Ge, Li—As and Li—Ag. During operation of anode-free batteries, the anode potential will likely be ˜0 V on the Li/Li+ scale. The redox potentials of Ca, Sr and K is close to the anode potential, implying that they may dissolve under these conditions. Na and Mg are highly reactive chemically and thus were not considered.
[0027] For the alloy materials, only the fully lithiated phases were considered as any other phase would consume lithium inventory during cycling. In some embodiments, partially lithiated phases can also be used as long as it satisfies the adsorption characteristics and kinetic barriers identified. Thus, the final list of materials considered is Cu, Fe, Ti, Ni, Cr. V, Mo, W, Zr, Mn, LiZn, Li.sub.9Al.sub.4, Li.sub.2Ga, LiB, Li.sub.22Si.sub.5, Li.sub.17Sn.sub.4, Li.sub.22Pb.sub.5, Li.sub.3Cd, Li.sub.2Se, Li.sub.2Te, Li.sub.13In.sub.3, Li.sub.3Tl. Li.sub.15Ge.sub.4, Li.sub.3Sb, Li.sub.3As, Li.sub.3Bi and Li.sub.3Ag. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed on the low miller index surfaces of all of these materials to evaluate the Li nucleation overpotential and Li surface diffusion energy barrier.
[0028] Self-Consistent DFT calculations were performed using the real space projector-augmented wave method implemented in the GPAW code. The Bayesian Error Estimation Functional with van der Waals (BEEF-vdW) exchange correlation functional was used for all adsorption free energy calculations owing to its accuracy for describing adsorption energies and energy barriers. For all calculations, the two bottom layers of the unit cell were constrained and the top two layers along with the adsorbates were allowed to relax with a force criterion of <0.05 eV/A°. A Fermi smearing of 0.1 eV was used. The Brillouin zone was sampled using the Monkhorst Pack scheme and a k-point grid was chosen such that the k.sub.xL.sub.x, k.sub.yL.sub.y, k.sub.zL.sub.z>40° A.sup.−1 where k.sub.x, k.sub.y, k.sub.z are the number of k-points and L.sub.x, L.sub.y, L.sub.z are the lengths of the unit cell in the x, y, z directions. To evaluate the nucleation overpotentials, a low coverage (θ<0.2) and the fully (1 ML) covered (θ=1) surfaces were simulated.
[0029] At low Li coverage, the Li nucleation overpotential on Li itself is about 0.3 V, while, at 1 ML coverage, it drops down to 0.1 V. Most transition metals bind Li too strongly with an overpotential >0.3 V at low coverage as shown in
[0030] Cr(100), Fe(100), V(100), Zr(1120), Ti(1120) and Mn(110) adsorb Li at low coverage with lower nucleation overpotential than Li itself. For Cr, Fe and V, which are bcc crystals, the Li is adsorbed in the hollow site and the (100) surface has the weakest binding due to a higher coordination number of the surface atoms.
[0031] Similarly, for hcp metals Zr and Ti, the weakest binding is for the (1120) surface and for Mn it is the (110) surface.
[0032] At 1 ML Li coverage, almost all transition metal surfaces significantly over-bind Li, with the exception of Cu(111), Fe(110), V(110) and Ni(111) as shown in
[0033] The surface energies given in Table S1 (See
[0034] For Ni, the (111) surface is the most stable and has moderate binding at 1 ML coverage but over binds Li at low coverage. Ni can be used instead of Cu but would not provide any significant improvement. Among the transition metals there are no candidates that provide a good Li nucleation at both low and high Li coverage. As such, it appears that Li nucleation at best would be similar to Cu, which is the currently used current collector and provides inadequate performance.
[0035] Of the Li-alloy surfaces, the Li-rich terminations are thermodynamically stable due to the fact that Li has the least surface energy compared to other elements. This means that on Li-alloy surfaces, the nucleation of Li effectively occurs on a strained Li surface. It is well known that the adsorption energy can be tuned depending on the strain of the surface. As such, the Li nucleation overpotentials for these Li-alloy surfaces are closer to Li than in the case of other transition metals considered above. The surface energies for the low miller index surfaces for these alloys are given in Table S2 (See
[0036] For LiZn, the (100) and (110) surfaces have the lowest surface energy. For Li.sub.3Cd, the (100), (110) and (111) surfaces have comparable surface energies. For Li.sub.3Ag, the (001), (100), (110) and (111) surfaces have similar surface energy while the (101) surface has a higher surface energy and would exist at a lower fraction on the surface. For Li.sub.2Ga, the (001), (100), (101) and (111) surfaces will dominate the surface. For Li.sub.9Al.sub.4, the (010), (100), (101), (110) and (111) surfaces will exist on the surface of the alloys. Lastly for LiB, the (1010), (1011) and (1120) surfaces have low surface energies. As such, only these surfaces will be considered. As mentioned before, the surface energies of these stable surfaces are close to the surface energies of the Li surfaces (within
proving that the stable surfaces are Li-like.
[0037] As shown in
[0038] At 1 ML coverage for Li alloys, all the stable surfaces for all Li-alloys have a nucleation overpotential lower than 0.1 V, which is the case for Li(111) as can be seen in
[0039] Ensuring 2-dimensional growth at high rates will depend on the surface diffusion of Li atoms on the current collector surface. Also, the faster the surface diffusion, the more likely the chance of uniform film growth, since the nucleation of Li on most of the current collector surfaces considered above is thermodynamically more favorable than nucleation on Li surfaces. During surface diffusion, the atoms jump from one site to the next site. The diffusion coefficient for such a process is given by:
[0040] To a first approximation, assume that the overall diffusion coefficient for Li diffusion on current collector surfaces is dependent on the activation energy. The Li surface diffusion activation energy was calculated using the nudged elastic band method for 12 surfaces on the low coverage cases and the results are shown in Table. 1. Two adjacent adsorption sites were considered as the initial and final states for the surface diffusion calculation. The nudged elastic band method as implemented in the atomic simulation environment was employed to create five intermediate states for Li diffusion.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Activation Energies Calculated for a Set of Transition Metals and Li Alloy Surfaces Surface Activation Energy (E.sub.a) Li(100) 0.08 Li(110) 0.01 Li.sub.2Ga(100) 0.05 Fe(100) 0.14 Cr(100) 0.14 V(100) 0.13 Mo(100) 0.24 Fe(111) 0.26 Cu(100) 0.10 LiZn(100) 0.13 Cu (111) 0.03 LiB(10
[0041] To calculate the Li-diffusion activation energies for all of the remaining surfaces, a Brønsted-Evans-Polanyi (BEP) relation between the activation energy and the adsorption enthalpy of 1 ML Li covered surfaces was derived. BEP relations have been demonstrated for a variety of adsorbates on different transition metal surfaces and provide a simple way to compute a large number of activation energies. As expected, there is a strong correlation between the activation energy and the adsorption enthalpy of the 1 ML covered Li surfaces, as shown in
[0042] For all Li-alloy surfaces, except for LiZn(111), which is not thermodynamically stable, the activation energy is lower than the defined criteria of 0.15 eV as shown in
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[0044] Small diffusion activation energies, in addition to slightly stronger binding on the Li-alloy surfaces in comparison to Li, will also help in redistribution of the dendritic Li over time.
[0045] Lastly, it is well known in anode-free batteries that, at higher current rates, the Li nuclei size decreases and the nuclei number increases. This results in a tremendous increase in the surface area which results in significantly increased SEI formation reactions. Thus, a decrease in coulombic efficiency is expected with increase in higher charging current. As such, Li-alloys with better nucleation and diffusion will improve performance at high charging rates for anode-free cells.
[0046] In summary, candidates for potential current collectors for anode-free lithium metal cells were screened for a variety of properties. Using density functional theory calculations, the nucleation overpotentials and surface diffusion activation energies for Li on various current collector material surfaces have been calculated. Among the candidates considered, using Li and Li-alloys as the current collector it is possible to develop cells with specific energies greater than 400 Wh/kg, which is challenging with standard transition metal current collectors such Cu, Ni and Ti. NEB calculations were done to derive a BEP relation, which was then used to determine the Li surface diffusion activation energies. Using the BEP relation, to a first approximation, the 1 ML Li adsorption energy (ΔG.sub.ads,1ML) can be used as a descriptor for current collector performance, with optimal performance obtained when ΔG.sub.ads,1ML≈0. Li-alloys, Cu(111), Fe(110), V(110) and Ni(111) satisfy the above criterion. Thus, in accordance with the present invention, the use of Li-alloys such as Li—Zn, Li—Al, Li—B, Li—Cd, Li—Ag, Li—Si, Li—Pb, Li—Sn, Li—Mg etc. are suitable as current collectors for anode free batteries to get high specific energies, low nucleation overpotentials, better rate capability and probably better control over dendrite in good electrolytes.