2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(420d) A Scaling Law to Determine Phase Morphologies during Ion Intercalation
Driven phase separation in ion intercalation materials is known to result in different non-equilibrium phase morphologies, such as intercalation waves and shrinking-core structures, but the mechanisms of pattern selection are poorly understood. Here, based on the idea that the coarsening of the slowest phase is the rate limiting step, we introduce a scaling law that quantifies the transition from quasi-equilibrium intercalation-wave to diffusion-limited shrinking-core behavior. The scaling law is validated by phase-field simulations of single LixCoO2 particles, as well as in situ optical imaging of single LixC6 particles undergoing transitions between stage 1 (x=1) and 2 (x=0.5) at different rates. The results are summarized in operational phase diagrams to guide simulations, experiments, and engineering applications of phase-separating active materials, and the implications for Li-ion battery performance and degradation are discussed.
![](https://proceedings.aiche.org/sites/default/files/aiche-proceedings/1783961/papers/611960/Paper_611960_abstract_170169_0.jpg)
![](https://proceedings.aiche.org/sites/default/files/aiche-proceedings/1783961/papers/611960/Paper_611960_abstract_170169_0.jpg)