Abstract
The solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) plays a key role in the aging of lithium-ion batteries. The engineering of advanced negative electrode materials to increase battery lifetime relies on accurate models of SEI growth, but quantitative measurement of SEI growth rates remains challenging due to their nanoscale heterogeneity and environmental sensitivity. In this work, using operando electrochemical atomic force microscopy, we track the growth of SEI on copper in a carbonate electrolyte. From operando measurements of SEI thickness and irreversible electrochemical capacity, we directly visualize the dual growth regimes of the SEI, observing an early-stage primary SEI approximately 10 times more “electrochemically compact” than later-stage secondary SEI, as quantified via the incremental thickness per charge passed. While primary SEI is responsible for about half of the irreversible capacity loss (in a 24 h period), it accounts for only a tenth of thickness. We also show that nanoscale defects on the copper substrate play a key role in determining the non-uniform growth morphology of the SEI, thus providing novel, direct evidence that initial SEI growth is not purely transport-limited. Our experiments reveal SEI grows by two modes: first a reaction-limited nucleation and growth of a dense, passivating primary SEI layer, governed by ion-coupled electron transfer kinetics; and subsequently by diffusion-limited growth of a porous secondary SEI layer, once the primary SEI fully passivates the electrode surface.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Information for Two-Stage Growth of Solid Electrolyte Interphase on Copper: Imaging and Quantification by Operando Atomic Force Microscopy
Description
Supplementary information including additional AFM images, validation of samples and details on the electrochemical model.
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