A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries

Laser processes for cutting, annealing, structuring, and printing of battery materials have a great potential in order to minimize the fabrication costs and to increase the electrochemical performance and operational lifetime of lithium-ion cells. Hereby, a broad range of applications can be covered...

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Main Author: Pfleging Wilhelm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-02-01
Series:Nanophotonics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2017-0044
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spelling doaj-ebd99c1f540d4850b702e0ba94cc209b2021-09-06T19:20:30ZengDe GruyterNanophotonics2192-86062192-86142018-02-017354957310.1515/nanoph-2017-0044nanoph-2017-0044A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteriesPfleging Wilhelm0Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, IAM-AWP, P.O. Box 3640, 76021 Karlsruhe, GermanyLaser processes for cutting, annealing, structuring, and printing of battery materials have a great potential in order to minimize the fabrication costs and to increase the electrochemical performance and operational lifetime of lithium-ion cells. Hereby, a broad range of applications can be covered such as micro-batteries, mobile applications, electric vehicles, and stand-alone electric energy storage devices. Cost-efficient nanosecond (ns)-laser cutting of electrodes was one of the first laser technologies which were successfully transferred to industrial high-energy battery production. A defined thermal impact can be useful in electrode manufacturing which was demonstrated by laser annealing of thin-film electrodes for adjusting of battery active crystalline phases or by laser-based drying of composite thick-film electrodes for high-energy batteries. Ultrafast or ns-laser direct structuring or printing of electrode materials is a rather new technical approach in order to realize three-dimensional (3D) electrode architectures. Three-dimensional electrode configurations lead to a better electrochemical performance in comparison to conventional 2D one, due to an increased active surface area, reduced mechanical tensions during electrochemical cycling, and an overall reduced cell impedance. Furthermore, it was shown that for thick-film composite electrodes an increase of electrolyte wetting could be achieved by introducing 3D micro-/nano-structures. Laser structuring can turn electrodes into superwicking. This has a positive impact regarding an increased battery lifetime and a reliable battery production. Finally, laser processes can be up-scaled in order to transfer the 3D battery concept to high-energy and high-power lithium-ion cells.https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2017-0044laser processingthin filmscomposite thick filmselectrodelithium-ion battery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pfleging Wilhelm
spellingShingle Pfleging Wilhelm
A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries
Nanophotonics
laser processing
thin films
composite thick films
electrode
lithium-ion battery
author_facet Pfleging Wilhelm
author_sort Pfleging Wilhelm
title A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries
title_short A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries
title_full A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries
title_fullStr A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries
title_full_unstemmed A review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries
title_sort review of laser electrode processing for development and manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries
publisher De Gruyter
series Nanophotonics
issn 2192-8606
2192-8614
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Laser processes for cutting, annealing, structuring, and printing of battery materials have a great potential in order to minimize the fabrication costs and to increase the electrochemical performance and operational lifetime of lithium-ion cells. Hereby, a broad range of applications can be covered such as micro-batteries, mobile applications, electric vehicles, and stand-alone electric energy storage devices. Cost-efficient nanosecond (ns)-laser cutting of electrodes was one of the first laser technologies which were successfully transferred to industrial high-energy battery production. A defined thermal impact can be useful in electrode manufacturing which was demonstrated by laser annealing of thin-film electrodes for adjusting of battery active crystalline phases or by laser-based drying of composite thick-film electrodes for high-energy batteries. Ultrafast or ns-laser direct structuring or printing of electrode materials is a rather new technical approach in order to realize three-dimensional (3D) electrode architectures. Three-dimensional electrode configurations lead to a better electrochemical performance in comparison to conventional 2D one, due to an increased active surface area, reduced mechanical tensions during electrochemical cycling, and an overall reduced cell impedance. Furthermore, it was shown that for thick-film composite electrodes an increase of electrolyte wetting could be achieved by introducing 3D micro-/nano-structures. Laser structuring can turn electrodes into superwicking. This has a positive impact regarding an increased battery lifetime and a reliable battery production. Finally, laser processes can be up-scaled in order to transfer the 3D battery concept to high-energy and high-power lithium-ion cells.
topic laser processing
thin films
composite thick films
electrode
lithium-ion battery
url https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2017-0044
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