Alkali Metal Plating and Stripping in Liquid Electrolytes
Doktorsavhandling, 2025

Batteries have relatively modest energy densities compared to fossil fuels. In the effort to make battery-driven transport solutions and technologies competitive with gasoline-powered alternatives, it is important to develop batteries with higher energy densities. This can be enabled by utilizing electrode materials that charge and discharge through other electrochemical reactions compared to the conventional Li-ion batteries. Metal anodes are one such class of materials. For instance, lithium metal is one of the electrode materials that can enable the highest theoretical energy densities. Further, sodium or potassium metal can help increase the energy density of batteries built using more abundant materials. To charge a metal anode, ions from the electrolyte are electrochemically plated onto the electrode surface, and during discharge, the metal is stripped from the electrode, releasing ions back into the electrolyte. However, the reversibility of alkali metal plating and stripping is currently not sufficient to enable batteries with acceptable cycle lives and high energy densities. The high reactivity and low reduction potentials of alkali metals drive side reactions between the metal and the electrolyte, consuming active material to form an interphase layer. The side reactions are exacerbated by the tendency to form porous structures during plating, increasing the surface area of the electrode, further aggravating the side reactions. Subsequent stripping from the porous structures to discharge the cell risks creating electronically insulated metal regions, preventing full utilization of the electrode. Therefore, the issues of plating/stripping reversibility in alkali metal electrodes depend on the highly coupled issues of electrode interphase formation, and electrode morphology. The interphase layer will affect the homogeneity and morphology of the lithium plating. The morphology of the plated lithium in turn determines how the side reactions inside the cell will progress. In this thesis, in situ and operando characterization methods are used to track how interphases and electrode morphologies interrelate and how they evolve during cycling. Electrochemical characterization methods are combined with neutron reflectometry and X-ray tomography to help build mechanistic models of how different electrode morphologies evolve during cycling.

Lithium

Stripping

Plating

Nucleation

Potassium

Metal anodes

Solid Electrolyte Interphase

PJ-salen, Kemigården 1
Opponent: Professor Alexandre Ponrouch, Institut de Ciencia de Materials de Barcelona, Spanien

Författare

Josef Rizell

Chalmers, Fysik, Materialfysik

Electrochemical Signatures of Potassium Plating and Stripping

Journal of the Electrochemical Society,;Vol. 171(2024)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Rizell, J., Vanpeene, V., Olsson, M. Jamroz, J., Vinci, V., Stamati, O., Villanova, J., Lyonnard, S., Matic, A. Revealing Li growth modes using X-ray nano-tomography

Rizell, J., Vanpeene, V., Dufvenius Esping, E., Olsson, M., Pinzón Forero, G., Villanova, J., Lyonnard, S., Matic, A. Pore formation in lithium metal electrodes under pressure

Looking inside the next generation of batteries
Today lithium-ion batteries dominate the energy storage market. In these systems, one of the electrodes is made from graphite, which acts as a host for lithium ions when the battery is charged. If a lithium metal electrode can be used instead, the weight of the batteries can be reduced without decreasing their energy content. Other alkali metals like sodium and potassium could also be used to make more sustainable batteries. However, these types of electrodes unfortunately degrade very fast when they are used, giving the batteries a short lifetime. This degradation is caused by changes in the structures of the alkali metal during charging and discharging.

This thesis focuses on understanding the mechanisms behind the degradation of alkali metal electrodes by analyzing how and why their structures evolve. Sophisticated methods make it possible to investigate changes in electrode structure where they occur – inside the battery. For example, a type of computed tomography (CT), similar to what is employed in the medical field, can record 3D images of electrodes during charging and discharging, without the need to open the battery. This gives unique step-by-step images, capturing changes of the electrode structure that have never been observed in real time before. Insights from this and other experiments in the thesis can inspire the development of strategies to improve the lifetime of alkali metal electrodes, enabling new, lighter batteries for electric transport.

Hållbara materiallösningar för nästa generations batterier med hög kapacitet

Formas (FR-2019/0007), 2020-01-01 -- 2022-12-31.

Advanced materials for rechargeable potassium-sulfur batteries

STINT (MG2019-8455), 2020-05-01 -- 2023-06-30.

Drivkrafter

Hållbar utveckling

Styrkeområden

Nanovetenskap och nanoteknik

Energi

Materialvetenskap

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Kemi

Den kondenserade materiens fysik

Fundament

Grundläggande vetenskaper

Infrastruktur

Chalmers materialanalyslaboratorium

ISBN

978-91-8103-254-3

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5712

Utgivare

Chalmers

PJ-salen, Kemigården 1

Opponent: Professor Alexandre Ponrouch, Institut de Ciencia de Materials de Barcelona, Spanien

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-07-31