http://www.juraforum.de/wissenschaft/memory-effect-now-also-found-in-lithium-ion-batteries-435719
Memory Effect Now Also Found in Lithium-Ion Batteries
14.04.2013  Source idw

Due to their high energy density, lithium-ion batteries are used in many
commercial electronic appliances. They are also believed to exhibit no
memory effect. That’s how experts call a deviation in the voltage of the
battery that can limit the usability of the stored energy as well as the
ability to determine the state of charge of the battery reliably. Scientists
at the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI, and the Toyota Central R&D Labs, Inc. in
Japan have now however discovered a memory effect in a lithium-ion battery.
This finding is particularly relevant for the use of lithium-ion batteries
in the electric vehicle market. The work was published today in the
scientific journal Nature Materials.

Many of our everyday devices that get their energy supply from a battery,
whilst not always being as “smart” as they are described in the adverts,
often come equipped with a kind of memory. For example, a battery powered
shaver or electric toothbrush that is recharged before the battery runs out,
can later take revenge on the prudent user. The battery appears to remember
that you have only taken part of its storage capacity – and eventually no
longer supplies its full energy. Experts refer to this as a “memory effect“,
which comes about because the working voltage of the battery drops over time
because of incomplete charging-discharging cycles. This means that despite
the battery still being discharged, the voltage it supplies is sometimes too
low to drive the device in question. The memory effect therefore has two
negative consequences: firstly, the usable capacity of the battery is
reduced, and secondly the correlation between the voltage and the charge
status is shifted, so the latter cannot be determined reliably on the basis
of voltage.

The memory effect has long been known to exist in Nickel-Cadmium- and
Nickel-metal hydride batteries. Ever since lithium-ion batteries started to
be successfully marketed in the 1990s, the existence of the memory effect in
this type of battery had been ruled out. Incorrectly, as this new study
indicates.

Consequences of the Memory Effect for Electric and Hybrid Vehicles

The memory effect and its associated abnormal working voltage deviation have
now been confirmed for one of the most common materials used as the positive
electrode in lithium-ion batteries, lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4). With
lithium-iron phosphate, the voltage remains practically unchanged over a
large range of the state of charge. This means that even a small anomaly in
the operating voltage could be misinterpreted as a major change in the state
of charge. Or, to put it another way: when the state of charge is determined
from the voltage a large error can be caused by a small deviation in the
voltage.

The existence of a memory effect is particularly relevant in the context of
the anticipated steps towards using lithium-ion batteries in the electric
mobility sector. In hybrid cars in particular, the effect can arise during
the many cycles of charging/discharging that occur during their normal
operation. In such vehicles, the battery is partially recharged during each
braking operation by the engine running in a generator mode. It is in turn
discharged, and usually only partially, to assist the engine during
acceleration phases. The numerous successive cycles of partial charging and
discharging lead to individual small memory effects adding up to a large
memory effect, as this new study demonstrates. This leads to an error in the
estimate of the current state of charge of the battery, in cases where the
state of charge is calculated by software on the basis of the current value
of the voltage.

A microscopic explanation

The researchers also examined the causes of the memory effect at a
microscopic level. The electrode material – in this case lithium-iron
phosphate (LiFePO4) – consists of a large number of small, micrometer-sized
particles which are charged and discharged individually one after the other.
Researchers refer to this model of charging and discharging as the “many
particles model”. Charging proceeds particle by particle, and involves the
release of lithium ions. A fully charged particle is therefore lithium-free
and comprises only iron phosphate (FePO4). Discharge in turn involves the
re-incorporation of lithium atoms into the electrode particles, so that iron
phosphate (FePO4) becomes lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4) once more. 

The changes in the amount of lithium associated with charging and
discharging induce a change in the chemical potential of the individual
particles, which in turn changes the voltage of the battery. However,
charging and discharging are not linear processes. During charging, chemical
potential initially increases, with the progressive release of lithium ions.
But then, the particles reach a critical lithium-content value (and chemical
potential). At this point, there is an abrupt transition: the particles give
up their remaining lithium ions very rapidly, but are not allowed to change
their chemical potential. This is the transition that explains why battery
voltage remains practically unchanged over a wide region (voltage plateau).

The Barrier between “Rich” and “Poor”

The existence of this potential barrier is vital for the memory effect to
become manifest. Once the first particles have overcome the potential
barrier, and have become lithium-free, the electrode particle population
gets split up into two groups. In other words: there is now a clear
distinction between lithium-rich and lithium-poor particles (see graphic).
If the battery is not fully charged, a certain number of lithium-rich
particles that have not made it over the barrier will remain. These
particles do not remain on the edge of the barrier for long, because this
state is unstable, and they will “slide down the slope”, that is, their
chemical potential will decrease. 

Even when the battery is discharged again and all of the particles will come
to rest in front of the barrier, this division into two groups will be
maintained. And here is the crucial point: during the next charging process,
the first group (lithium-poor particles) will overcome the barrier first,
whilst the second group (lithium-rich) will “lag behind”. In order for the
“delayed” group to get over the barrier, their chemical potential must be
increased, and this is what causes the overvoltage (the “bump” in the
graphic) that characterises the memory effect. The memory effect is thus a
consequence of the particle population being divided into two groups, with
very different concentrations of lithium, which is followed by the particles
“jumping” over the potential barrier one after the other. This overvoltage,
through which the effect is noticeable, is equal to the additional work that
needs to be done to carry the particles that lagged behind after a partial
charge, over the potential barrier.

Wait Until the Memory Fades

The time that elapses between charging and discharging a battery plays an
important role in determining the state of the battery at the end of these
processes. Charging and discharging are processes that alter the
thermodynamic equilibrium of the battery, and this equilibrium can be
achieved after some time. Scientists have found that idling a sufficiently
long period of time can be used to erase the memory effect. However, in
accordance with the many particles model, this only happens under certain
conditions. 

The memory effect only vanished if one waited a sufficiently long time after
a cycle of partial charging followed by full discharge. In such cases, the
two particle groups were still separated after the full discharge, but were
found on the same side of the potential barrier. Thus, the separation
disappeared, because particles attained an equilibrium state, in which they
all had the same lithium-content. The memory effect remained however
providing you waited after the partial charging and before the incomplete
discharge. Here, the particles were on opposite sides of the potential
barrier, and this prevented a reverse of their division into “lithium-rich”
and “lithium-poor”.

According to Professor Petr Novak, Head of the Electrochemical Energy
Storage Section at the PSI and co-author of the publication, the study
disproves a long cherished misconception: ”Ours is the first study that has
specifically looked for a memory effect in lithium-ion batteries. It had
simply been assumed that no such effect would arise“. To acquire knowledge
via research is often a fruitful mix of speculation and diligence: “Our
finding results from a combination of critical investigation and careful
observation. The effect is in fact tiny: the relative deviation in voltage
is just a few parts per thousand. But the key was the idea of looking for it
at all. Normal battery tests usually run deep, and not partial
charging/discharging cycles. It thus took a flash of inspiration in order to
ask what might happen during partial charging in the first place.

For the future use of lithium-ion batteries in vehicles however, this recent
discovery is not the final word. It is indeed absolutely possible that the
effect could be detected and taken into account through clever adaptation of
the software in battery management systems, Novak pointed out. Should that
prove successful, the memory effect would not stand in the way of a reliable
use of lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles. So now, engineers face
the challenge of finding the correct way of handling the peculiar memory of
batteries.

Text: Leonid Leiva

Box
According to the many particles model described here, charging and
discharging the battery is considered to take place particle by particle. In
this context, by particles, we mean a kind of “grains“. This means that the
material (LiFePO4) does not come "as one piece", but rather as a collection
of grains, in each of which the crystal structure is nominally the same, but
in which the granules have minute differences, either in size, shape or
orientation. This is the typical structure of powders. In technical terms,
these are called “crystallites“. One can imagine these as roughly equally
sized cubes lying side by side. Each cube would be slightly rotated relative
to its neighbours, that is, the cubes are not strictly aligned, but the
crystal structure (the cuboidal shape) is the same for all.

Contact:
Prof. Dr. Petr Novák, Head of the section for electrochemical energy
storage, Paul Scherrer Institute, 5232 Villigen PSI, Switzerland
Telephone: +41 56 310 2457; e-mail: [email protected]

Original publication:

Tsuyoshi Sasaki, Yoshio Ukyo und Petr Novák. Memory effect in a lithium-ion
battery.
Nat. Materials, Advanced Online Publication
doi: 10.1038/NMAT3623;

Weitere Informationen:
- http://www.psi.ch/lec/electrochemica...energy storage
- http://psi.ch/fKSp - additional pictures
[© 2013 JuraForum.de ]




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