The physical and chemical behaviors of materials used in energy storage devices, such as lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), are mainly controlled by an electrochemical process, which normally involves insertion/extraction of ions into/from a host lattice with a concurrent flow of electrons to compensate charge balance. The fundamental physics and chemistry governing the behavior of materials in response to the ions insertion/extraction is not known. Herein, a combination of in situ lithiation experiments and large-scale ab initio molecular dynamics simulations are performed to explore the mechanisms of the electrochemically driven solid-state amorphization in Li-Si systems. We find that local electron-rich condition governs the electrochemically driven solid-state amorphization of Li-Si alloys. This discovery provides the fundamental explanation of why lithium insertion in semiconductor and insulators leads to amorphization, whereas in metals, it leads to a crystalline alloy. The present work correlates electrochemically driven reactions with ion insertion, electron transfer, lattice stability and phase equilibrium.
Revised: September 19, 2013 |
Published: August 14, 2013
Citation
Wang Z., M. Gu, Y. Zhou, X. Zu, J.G. Connell, J. Xiao, and D.E. Perea, et al. 2013.Electron-Rich Driven Electrochemical Solid-State Amorphization in Li-Si Alloys.Nano Letters 13, no. 9:4511-4516.PNNL-SA-97210.doi:10.1021/nl402429a