The trade-off between performance, aging, and safety remains a major challenge for Li-ion batteries [1]. Indeed, the incorporation of certain additives into the 3rd-generation electrolyte aims to delay or reduce the consequences of thermal runaway, thus reducing the risk of fire or explosion. However, this approach can have negative effects on other key parameters, such as ionic conductivity [2,3]. Therefore, this thesis proposes to study the coupled effects of these additives in order to better understand and potentially predict their impact on each of these indicators.
At the beginning of this work, an additive will be selected to study its role in an NMC 811/Gr-Si chemistry and a 3rd-generation liquid electrolyte, in terms of performance, long-term stability, and safety. The additive will be chosen based on the state of the art and post-mortem analysis of commercial cells representative of the current market. In parallel, new commercial cells of a few Ah will be used. These will be equipped with a reference electrode, internal temperature measurement, and ionic conductivity monitoring. The cells will then be activated with the selected electrolyte at different additive concentrations. Electrochemical performance, along with chemical and morphological characterization of the materials present, will be studied. Key safety parameters (thermal stability, release of reducing gases, O2, released energy, flammability of the electrolyte) for these new cells will be measured at different additive concentrations. The internal instrumentation, including the reference electrode, will also be used innovatively to study the onset of thermal runaway under these conditions.
A full aging campaign will be conducted over a maximum period of one year. At regular intervals, a sample of cells will be studied to characterize the impact of aging on chemical, electrochemical, and morphological changes, as well as on key safety parameters. The most important mechanisms, along with simplified laws governing safety as a function of additive quantity and aging, will be proposed.
[1] Batteries Open Access Volume 9, Issue 8, August 2023, Article number 427
[2] Journal of Energy Storage 72 (2023) 108493
[3] Energy Storage Materials 65 (2024) 10313