The Effect of Electrode-Electrolyte Interface on the Electrochemical Impedance Spectra for Positive Electrode in Li-Ion Battery
Author(s) -
Ryoichi Tatara,
Pınar Karayaylalı,
Yang Yu,
Yirui Zhang,
Livia Giordano,
Filippo Maglia,
Roland Jung,
Jan Philipp Schmidt,
Isaac Lund,
Yang ShaoHorn
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of the electrochemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.258
H-Index - 271
eISSN - 1945-7111
pISSN - 0013-4651
DOI - 10.1149/2.0121903jes
Subject(s) - electrolyte , electrode , dielectric spectroscopy , chemistry , lithium (medication) , analytical chemistry (journal) , electrical impedance , palladium hydrogen electrode , ethylene carbonate , electrochemistry , battery (electricity) , ion , electrode potential , standard electrode potential , half cell , reference electrode , working electrode , thermodynamics , electrical engineering , power (physics) , physics , organic chemistry , medicine , engineering , chromatography , endocrinology
Understanding the effect of electrode-electrolyte interface (EEI) on the kinetics of electrode reaction is critical to design high-energy Li-ion batteries. While electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) is used widely to examine the kinetics of electrode reaction in Li-ion batteries, ambiguities exist in the physical origin of EIS responses for composite electrodes. In this study, we performed EIS measurement by using a three-electrode cell with a mesh-reference electrode, to avoid the effect of counter electrode impedance and artefactual responses due to asymmetric cell configuration, and composite or oxide-only working electrodes. Here we discuss the detailed assignment of impedance spectra for LiCoO2 as a function of voltage. The high-frequency semicircle was assigned to the impedance associated with ion adsorption and desorption at the electrified interface while the low-frequency semicircle was related to the charge transfer impedance associated with desolvation/solvation of lithium ions, and lithium ion intercalation/de-intercalation into/from LixCoO2. Exposure to higher charging voltages and greater hold time at high voltages led to no significant change for the high-frequency component but greater resistance and greater activation energy for the low-frequency circle. The greater charge transfer impedance was attributed to the growth of EEI layers on the charged LixCoO2 surface associated with electrolyte oxidation promoted by ethylene carbonate dehydrogenation.
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