Volume 248, 2024

Insights into soft short circuit-based degradation of lithium metal batteries

Abstract

The demand for electric vehicles with extended ranges has created a renaissance of interest in replacing the common metal-ion with higher energy-density metal-anode batteries. However, the potential battery safety issues associated with lithium metal must be addressed to enable lithium metal battery chemistries. A considerable performance gap between lithium (Li) symmetric cells and practical Li batteries motivated us to explore the correlation between the shape of voltage traces and degradation. We coupled impedance spectroscopy and operando NMR and used the new approach to show that transient (i.e., soft) shorts form in realistic conditions for battery applications; however, they are typically overlooked, as their electrochemical signatures are often not distinct. The typical rectangular-shaped voltage trace, widely considered ideal, was proven, under the conditions studied here, to be a result of soft shorts. Recoverable soft-shorted cells were demonstrated during a symmetric cell polarisation experiment, defining a new type of critical current density: the current density at which the soft shorts are not reversible. Moreover, we demonstrated that soft shorts, detected via electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and validated via operando NMR, are predictive towards the formation of hard shorts, showing the potential use of EIS as a relatively low-cost and non-destructive method for early detection of catastrophic shorts and battery failure while demonstrating the strength of operando NMR as a research tool for metal plating in lithium batteries.

Graphical abstract: Insights into soft short circuit-based degradation of lithium metal batteries

Associated articles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 May 2023
Accepted
01 Jun 2023
First published
19 Jun 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Faraday Discuss., 2024,248, 277-297

Insights into soft short circuit-based degradation of lithium metal batteries

S. Menkin, J. B. Fritzke, R. Larner, C. de Leeuw, Y. Choi, A. B. Gunnarsdóttir and C. P. Grey, Faraday Discuss., 2024, 248, 277 DOI: 10.1039/D3FD00101F

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