4.8 Article

Low-Temperature Behavior of Alloy Anodes for Lithium-Ion Batteries

Journal

ADVANCED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 12, Issue 43, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/aenm.202201584

Keywords

anode materials; electrochemistry; energy storages; lithium-ion batteries; low temperature

Funding

  1. NASA Space Technology Graduate Research Opportunities (NSTGRO) Award
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE1650044]
  3. Sloan Foundation MPHD Program Scholarship
  4. NASA's Space Technology Research Grants Program
  5. National Science Foundation [ECCS-2025462]

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This study investigates the electrochemical and transformation behavior of three alloy materials (antimony, silicon, and tin) and finds that antimony is particularly well suited for low-temperature applications, offering ten times higher specific capacity than graphite on the first cycle. The study examines the kinetic and thermodynamic limitations of these materials at low temperatures using various techniques, including the galvanostatic intermittent titration technique and X-ray diffraction. The use of reference electrodes is also found to be necessary at low temperatures.
Lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) show poor performance at temperatures below 0 degrees C due to sluggish reaction kinetics, hindered diffusion, and electrolyte freezing. Materials that alloy with lithium offer higher specific capacity than graphite anodes and are studied extensively at room temperature, but their low-temperature behavior is not well understood. Here, the electrochemical and transformation behavior of three alloy materials (antimony, silicon, and tin) are investigated. It is shown that antimony is particularly well suited for low-temperature applications due to its relatively high electrode potential and promising electrochemical stability at low temperatures. It is found that lithium-antimony alloys can be cycled down to -40 degrees C with ten times higher specific capacity than graphite on the first cycle. The galvanostatic intermittent titration technique is used to understand the kinetic and thermodynamic limitations of these electrode materials at low temperatures, and X-ray diffraction shows that electrochemical phase transformation behavior is also altered at low temperatures. Finally, it is found that the use of reference electrodes is necessary at low temperatures to avoid counter electrode effects. This investigative study provides new understanding of the behavior of alloy anodes at low temperatures and reveals the need for electrode/electrolyte optimization to enable low-temperature LIBs.

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