Scientists Use ‘Smart Window’ to Observe Lithium-Ion Battery Operation

Smart Window Material May Make Better Batteries

These figures show the Swiss-cheese-like structure of an ultrathin nickel-oxide sheet, used as an electrode in a lithium-ion battery: (a) prior to the battery’s operation; (b) while discharging; (c) while charging; and (d) after a full cycle of discharging and charging. The blue arrows show the direction of chemical reactions spreading through the material during the battery’s operation. Credit: F. Lin et al./Nature Communications

By using ultrathin sheets of smart-window material, nickel oxide, as the anode in a lithium-ion battery, researchers were able to see for the first time exactly what happens when the battery’s lithium ions make contact with the nickel-oxide layer and how the resulting reaction spreads out from several different points.

High-tech “smart windows,” which darken to filter out sunlight in response to electric current, function much like batteries. Now, X-ray studies at SLAC provide a crystal-clear view into how the color-changing material in these windows behaves in a working battery – information that could benefit next-generation rechargeable batteries.

Researchers installed ultrathin sheets of smart-window material, nickel oxide, as the anode in a lithium-ion battery, and used SLAC’s Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL) and equipment at other labs to study its changing chemistry and 3-D features.

“We switched our attention from changing the color of these materials to using them to store lithium ions, but the principle is the same,” said Feng Lin of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, lead author of the study, published in Nature Communications.


Watching a battery at work: This animation shows a 3-D reconstruction, created with tomography, of a nickel-oxide nanosheet during the charging process in a lithium-ion battery. The nickel-oxide sheet was used in one of the battery’s electrodes. (F. Lin et al./Nature Communications)

Smart windows have multiple layers of glass that sandwich ultrathin films or nanocrystal coatings of materials, such as nickel oxide. When a small electric field is applied, the charge moves through the glass to the ultrathin material, which serves as an electrode, and the window turns from clear to dark.

Earlier studies found that the interaction of these specialized thin materials with the surrounding glass cause structural changes that facilitate the flow of electrical charge through the glass – a property that is also beneficial for batteries.

In this study, which uses nickel oxide as a battery electrode, researchers were able to see for the first time exactly what happens when the battery’s lithium ions make contact with the nickel-oxide layer and how the resulting reaction spreads out from several different points.

“It starts like a seed,” said Tsu-Chien Weng, an SSRL staff scientist who collaborated in the research. “Then there are several different fronts for the reaction, and eventually a metallic framework is formed.”

In addition, researchers observed how the surface of the nickel-oxide material “breathes” as the battery charges and discharges.

“We found this layer growing on the surface, building out,” said Dennis Nordlund, a staff scientist at SSRL who participated in the research. “Then the layer goes away. It almost completely disappears. It’s like a breathing layer. It is not necessarily specific to nickel oxide, and it has wide implications for battery materials.”

This cyclical buildup of deposits from the electrolyte, usually referred to as the electrode-electrolyte interface, is an integral part of most battery materials but has been “a little bit of a mystery,” Nordlund said, as it is generally challenging to study during a battery’s operation.

In a typical lithium-ion battery, charged lithium ions migrate through a chemical solution – the electrolyte – into the anode when the battery is charging and into the opposite electrode, called the cathode, when the battery is discharging.

Because the breathing layer observed on the nickel oxide material builds up but then goes away, it could potentially limit the growth of “dendrites,” treelike fingers of lithium that are known to form on other types of battery materials and impair battery performance.

“If you can cycle and get rid of the layer so it does not build up over time that would be a huge step forward,” Nordlund said.

Researchers used a technique known as X-ray absorption spectroscopy at SSRL to probe the nickel oxide material at depths of about 5 and 50 nanometers, or billionths of a meter, during the battery’s operation.

“It turns out that these different probing depths are perfectly suited for studying the electronic structure at the surface of battery materials,” Nordlund said, adding that these capabilities at SSRL open up a window for exploring many materials in active states. “We really feel uniquely positioned to address a lot of different problems in energy science using this same methodology.”

The exploratory X-ray tools at SLAC and other collaborating labs have been key in understanding the properties of the nickel oxide material at the nanoscale, said Ryan Richards, a chemistry professor at the Colorado School of Mines who was involved in the study.

“We have submitted a number of proposals to look at different types of materials – how they form and what properties their surfaces have,” Richards said. He said his ongoing collaboration with the SSRL staff is “really blossoming into a nice relationship.”

The SSRL results were coupled with other findings from collaborators, including detailed 3-D images and movies produced at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Huolin Xin of Brookhaven Lab assembled the research team, which also included scientists from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and Monash University in Australia.

Reference: “Phase evolution for conversion reaction electrodes in lithium-ion batteries” by Feng Lin, Dennis Nordlund, Tsu-Chien Weng, Ye Zhu, Chunmei Ban, Ryan M. Richards and Huolin L. Xin, 24 February 2014, Nature Communications.
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4358

 

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