Continuum-Level Modeling of Li-Ion Battery Sei by Upscaling Atomistically Informed Reaction Mechanisms

36 Pages Posted: 6 Jun 2023

See all articles by Peter J. Weddle

Peter J. Weddle

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Energy Conversion and Storage Systems Center

Evan Walter Clark Spotte-Smith

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Ankit Verma

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Hetal D. Patel

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Kae Fink

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Bertrand J. Tremolet de Villers

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Maxwell C. Schulze

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Samuel M. Blau

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Kandler Smith

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Energy Conversion and Storage Systems Center; National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Center for Integrated Mobility Sciences

Kristin Persson

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Andrew Colclasure

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Energy Conversion and Storage Systems Center

Abstract

Understanding and controlling solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation to stabilize cell performance is a significant challenge for next-generation Li-ion battery technologies. In recent years, computational modeling has become an essential tool in providing fundamental insights into SEI properties and dynamics. However, neither atomistic nor continuum-level approaches alone can capture the complexities of SEI chemistry across all relevant length and time scales. In this work, a continuum-level model is developed that is informed by reaction mechanisms obtained from first-principle calculations. The atomistically informed continuum-level model is used to understand electrolyte degradation, including the decomposition of ethylene carbonate (EC), ethyl methyl carbonate (EMC), and fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC). The model presented here is the most chemically complex continuum-level SEI model in the literature to date. The SEI model is calibrated against experimental irreversible leakage currents and shows qualitative agreement with expected SEI growth trends. The model framework is expected to accelerate fundamental understanding of SEI formation, facilitate mechanism development feedback, and dynamically interact with experimental insights.

Keywords: Lithium-ion battery, Silicon anode, Solid-electrolyte Interphase, continuum-level model

Suggested Citation

Weddle, Peter J. and Spotte-Smith, Evan Walter Clark and Verma, Ankit and Patel, Hetal D. and Fink, Kae and Tremolet de Villers, Bertrand and Schulze, Maxwell C. and Blau, Samuel M. and Smith, Kandler and Persson, Kristin and Colclasure, Andrew, Continuum-Level Modeling of Li-Ion Battery Sei by Upscaling Atomistically Informed Reaction Mechanisms. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4470805 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4470805

Peter J. Weddle (Contact Author)

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Energy Conversion and Storage Systems Center ( email )

Evan Walter Clark Spotte-Smith

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Ankit Verma

National Renewable Energy Laboratory ( email )

Hetal D. Patel

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Kae Fink

National Renewable Energy Laboratory ( email )

1617 Cole Blvd.
Golden, CO 80401-3393
United States

Bertrand Tremolet de Villers

National Renewable Energy Laboratory ( email )

15013 Dever West Parkway
RSF B247
Golden, CO 80401-3393
United States
303-275-4138 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://www.nrel.gov/research/staff/bertrand-tremolet.html

Maxwell C. Schulze

National Renewable Energy Laboratory ( email )

1617 Cole Blvd.
Golden, CO 80401-3393
United States

Samuel M. Blau

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Kandler Smith

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Energy Conversion and Storage Systems Center ( email )

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Center for Integrated Mobility Sciences ( email )

United States

Kristin Persson

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory ( email )

210 Hearst Mining Building
Berkeley, CA 94720-1760
United States

Andrew Colclasure

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Energy Conversion and Storage Systems Center ( email )

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