
Ikusi/ Ireki
Izenburua
Elucidating the role of particle radius and active material diffusivity in metal-ion batteriesEgilea
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2025Beste erakundeak
https://ror.org/00wvqgd19CIC energiGUNE
Bertsioa
PostprintaDokumentu-mota
Kongresu-ekarpenaHizkuntza
IngelesaSarbidea
Sarbide irekiaNon argitaratua
POWER OUR FUTURE. International Forum on Progress and Trends in Battery and Capacitor Technologies 6. Vitoria-Gasteiz, 8-11th of July, 2025Gako-hitzak
ODS 9 Industria, innovación e infraestructuraLaburpena
The impact of particle size distribution and shape in metal-ion batteries has been widely
reported1. For the same active material properties (active material diffusivity, open circuit
potential etc. ... [+]
The impact of particle size distribution and shape in metal-ion batteries has been widely
reported1. For the same active material properties (active material diffusivity, open circuit
potential etc.) the use of smaller or bigger particle sizes in the porous electrode matrix
greatly influences cell performance. From the design standpoint, a good balance of particle
properties is of great importance2. In the research community, Scanning Electron
Microscopy (SEM), Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS) could be used to characterise the active
material particles. Moreover, different techniques such as Galvanostatic or Potentiostatic
Intermittent Tritiation Techniques (GITT/PITT) or Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy
(EIS) could be conducted to calculate bulk solid diffusivities of those materials3,4. The
experiments are usually performed at the electrode-level in half-cells, therefore, in order
to experimentally obtain bulk properties, the properties of the porous-electrode matrix
need to be known which requires heavy post-processing efforts.
Physics-based models can aid in this research, analysing the electrodes at different scales5
and fitting the diffusivity values4. The baseline of this research is the well-stablished
Pseudo-two-Dimensional (P2D) model. This model assumes that particles are spherical,
and monodispersed. This study will explore different model assumptions such as constant
solid diffusivity, stoichiometry dependent solid diffusivity (with ad-hoc analytical
functions), and Baker-Verbrugge diffusion model, among others. Moreover, the explicit
consideration of a particle size distribution is analyzed within the model. The aim is to get
a compromise between the accuracy and speed of the model, as well as proposing a
method for post-processing and including higher fidelity considerations about particle
radius and solid diffusion into P2D models.
The focus of this research is to perform experimental and numerical analysis to discuss
how to take into account the active material diffusivity and particle radius in continuumscale
simulations for metal-ion batteries. This work explores the benefits of different
assumptions (on particle size-distribution and solid diffusion) with the aim of applying those
improvements to a reduce order model that could potentially run in a real-time
environment to build advanced estimators with enhanced accuracy at high current rates. [-]


















