JOURNAL ARTICLE

Solvent‐Free Manufacturing of Lithium‐Ion Battery Electrodes via Cold Plasma

Abstract

Slurry casting has been used to fabricate lithium‐ion battery electrodes for decades, which involves toxic and expensive organic solvents followed by high‐cost vacuum drying and electrode calendering. This work presents a new manufacturing method using a nonthermal plasma to create inter‐particle binding without using any polymeric binding materials, enabling solvent‐free manufacturing electrodes with any electrochemistry of choice. The cold‐plasma‐coating technique enables fabricating electrodes with thickness (>200 μm), high mass loading (>30 mg cm −2 ), high peel strength, and the ability to print lithium‐ion batteries in an arbitrary geometry. This crosscutting, chemistry agnostic, platform technology would increase energy density, eliminate the use of solvents, vacuum drying, and calendering processes during production, and reduce manufacturing cost for current and future cell designs. Here, lithium iron phosphate and lithium cobalt oxide were used as examples to demonstrate the efficacy of the cold‐plasma‐coating technique. It is found that the mechanical peel strength of cold‐plasma‐coating‐manufactured lithium iron phosphate is over an order of magnitude higher than that of slurry‐casted lithium iron phosphate electrodes. Full cells assembled with a graphite anode and the cold‐plasma‐coating‐lithium iron phosphate cathode offer highly reversible cycling performance with a capacity retention of 81.6% over 500 cycles. For the highly conductive cathode material lithium cobalt oxide, an areal capacity of 4.2 mAh cm −2 at 0.2 C is attained. We anticipate that this new, highly scalable manufacturing technique will redefine global lithium‐ion battery manufacturing providing significantly reduced plant footprints and material costs.

Keywords:
Materials science Lithium iron phosphate Lithium (medication) Lithium cobalt oxide Anode Coating Electrode Cobalt oxide Cathode Battery (electricity) Lithium-ion battery Electrochemistry Chemical engineering Cobalt Composite material Metallurgy Chemistry

Metrics

22
Cited By
2.26
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
42
Refs
0.86
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advancements in Battery Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Battery Technologies Research
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Automotive Engineering
Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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