1. Correlative electron and ion beam analysis of the electrochemical performances of LiV3O8 cathode films as a function of microstructures.
- Author
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Sarbada, Varun, Yedra, Lluís, Pshenova, Alisa, Kercher, Andrew, Marschilok, Amy, Takeuchi, Kenneth J., Takeuchi, Esther, Dudney, Nancy, Wirtz, Tom, Eswara, Santhana, and Hull, Robert
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ELECTROCHEMICAL analysis , *ION analysis , *SECONDARY ion mass spectrometry , *ION beams , *ELECTRON beams , *AUGER electron spectroscopy , *CATHODES - Abstract
Degradation mechanisms in LiV 3 O 8 cathode films (~500 nm) with different initial microstructures i.e., globular nanocrystals in amorphous matrix and needle-like nanocrystals, synthesized by annealing the cathodes at 150 °C and 300 °C for 6 h are studied by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and Auger Electron Spectroscopy (AES). In addition, a unique in-situ combination of TEM and Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) imaging techniques, namely Parallel Ion and Electron beam Spectrometry (PIES) is carried out to measure the 3D distribution of V and Li with nanoscale resolution. These characterization studies focus on correlating the pre- and post-cycling microstructure to observed electrochemical performance. The LiV 3 O 8 cathode film with needle-like nanocrystals (300 °C) shows a higher initial capacity but it degrades rapidly compared to the film with globular nanocrystals embedded in amorphous matrix (150 °C). We observed that LiV 3 O 8 films with needle-like nanocrystals are more susceptible to cathode decohesion and vanadium dissolution than the films with globular nanocrystals embedded in amorphous matrix, explaining the differences in their electrochemical performance. The findings from this study have relevance to the development of thin film electrode microstructures for high capacity and cyclic stability. Image 1 • Microstructural effects on degradation mechanisms in LiV 3 O 8 thin films was studied. • Used correlative electron and ion microscopy for nano-scale microstructural studies. • Amorphous + nanocrystalline composite cathode exhibited higher cyclic stability. • A higher initial capacity that faded faster in needle-like nanocrystalline cathodes. • Faster capacity fade is due to higher V dissolution and cathode decohesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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