Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes

Consumers across the world use lithium-ion batteries in some fashion in their everyday life. The growing demand for energy has led to batteries dying quicker than consumers want. Thus, there are calls for researchers to develop batteries that are longer lasting. However, the initial increase in b...

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Main Author: Steiner, James David
Other Authors: Chemistry
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/85281
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-852812021-03-17T05:24:15Z Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes Steiner, James David Chemistry Lin, Feng Morris, Amanda J. Li, Zheng Nickel-rich surface chemistry layered oxide cathode titanium doping phase transformation Consumers across the world use lithium-ion batteries in some fashion in their everyday life. The growing demand for energy has led to batteries dying quicker than consumers want. Thus, there are calls for researchers to develop batteries that are longer lasting. However, the initial increase in battery life over the years has been from better engineering and not necessarily from making a better material for a battery. This thesis focuses on the understanding of the chemistry of the materials of a battery. Throughout the chapters, the research delves into the how and why materials with extra nickel degrade quickly. Then, it investigates a method of making these nickelrich materials last longer and how the chemistry within these materials are affected by the addition of a different metal. Overall, the findings indicate that the addition of titanium creates a more stable material because it mitigates the release of oxygen and prevents irreversible changes within the structure of the material. It determines that the chemistry behind the failings of nickel-rich lithium-ion batteries and a potential method for allowing the batteries to last longer. It also provides insight and guidance for potential future research of stabilization of lithium-ion materials. Master of Science Consumers across the world use lithium-ion batteries in some fashion in their everyday life. The growing demand for energy has led to batteries dying quicker than consumers want. Thus, there are calls for researchers to develop batteries that are longer lasting. However, the initial increase in battery life over the years has been from better engineering and not necessarily from making a better material for a battery. This thesis focuses on the understanding of the chemistry of the materials of a battery. Throughout the chapters, the research delves into the how and why materials with extra nickel degrade quickly. Then, it investigates a method of making these nickel-rich materials last longer and how the chemistry within these materials are affected by the addition of a different metal. Overall, the findings indicate that the addition of titanium creates a more stable material because it mitigates the release of oxygen and prevents irreversible changes within the structure of the material. It determines that the chemistry behind the failings of nickel-rich lithium-ion batteries and a potential method for allowing the batteries to last longer. It also provides insight and guidance for potential future research of stabilization of lithium-ion materials. 2018-10-09T08:00:15Z 2018-10-09T08:00:15Z 2018-10-08 Thesis vt_gsexam:17289 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/85281 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nickel-rich
surface chemistry
layered oxide cathode
titanium
doping
phase transformation
spellingShingle Nickel-rich
surface chemistry
layered oxide cathode
titanium
doping
phase transformation
Steiner, James David
Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes
description Consumers across the world use lithium-ion batteries in some fashion in their everyday life. The growing demand for energy has led to batteries dying quicker than consumers want. Thus, there are calls for researchers to develop batteries that are longer lasting. However, the initial increase in battery life over the years has been from better engineering and not necessarily from making a better material for a battery. This thesis focuses on the understanding of the chemistry of the materials of a battery. Throughout the chapters, the research delves into the how and why materials with extra nickel degrade quickly. Then, it investigates a method of making these nickelrich materials last longer and how the chemistry within these materials are affected by the addition of a different metal. Overall, the findings indicate that the addition of titanium creates a more stable material because it mitigates the release of oxygen and prevents irreversible changes within the structure of the material. It determines that the chemistry behind the failings of nickel-rich lithium-ion batteries and a potential method for allowing the batteries to last longer. It also provides insight and guidance for potential future research of stabilization of lithium-ion materials. === Master of Science === Consumers across the world use lithium-ion batteries in some fashion in their everyday life. The growing demand for energy has led to batteries dying quicker than consumers want. Thus, there are calls for researchers to develop batteries that are longer lasting. However, the initial increase in battery life over the years has been from better engineering and not necessarily from making a better material for a battery. This thesis focuses on the understanding of the chemistry of the materials of a battery. Throughout the chapters, the research delves into the how and why materials with extra nickel degrade quickly. Then, it investigates a method of making these nickel-rich materials last longer and how the chemistry within these materials are affected by the addition of a different metal. Overall, the findings indicate that the addition of titanium creates a more stable material because it mitigates the release of oxygen and prevents irreversible changes within the structure of the material. It determines that the chemistry behind the failings of nickel-rich lithium-ion batteries and a potential method for allowing the batteries to last longer. It also provides insight and guidance for potential future research of stabilization of lithium-ion materials.
author2 Chemistry
author_facet Chemistry
Steiner, James David
author Steiner, James David
author_sort Steiner, James David
title Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes
title_short Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes
title_full Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes
title_fullStr Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes
title_full_unstemmed Understanding and Controlling the Degradation of Nickel-rich Lithium-ion Layered Cathodes
title_sort understanding and controlling the degradation of nickel-rich lithium-ion layered cathodes
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/85281
work_keys_str_mv AT steinerjamesdavid understandingandcontrollingthedegradationofnickelrichlithiumionlayeredcathodes
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