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Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique

In this work we present for the first time high capacity silicon/carbon–graphite blend slurries designed for application in 3D-printed lithium ion microbatteries (3D-MLIBs). The correlation between electrochemical and rheological properties of the corresponding slurries was systematically investigat...

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Autores principales: Drews, Mathias, Tepner, Sebastian, Haberzettl, Peter, Gentischer, Harald, Beichel, Witali, Breitwieser, Matthias, Vierrath, Severin, Biro, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9054581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35514584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra03161e
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author Drews, Mathias
Tepner, Sebastian
Haberzettl, Peter
Gentischer, Harald
Beichel, Witali
Breitwieser, Matthias
Vierrath, Severin
Biro, Daniel
author_facet Drews, Mathias
Tepner, Sebastian
Haberzettl, Peter
Gentischer, Harald
Beichel, Witali
Breitwieser, Matthias
Vierrath, Severin
Biro, Daniel
author_sort Drews, Mathias
collection PubMed
description In this work we present for the first time high capacity silicon/carbon–graphite blend slurries designed for application in 3D-printed lithium ion microbatteries (3D-MLIBs). The correlation between electrochemical and rheological properties of the corresponding slurries was systematically investigated with the prospect of production by an automated dispensing process. A variation of the binder content (carboxymethyl cellulose/styrene–butadiene rubber, CMC/SBR) between 6 wt%, 12 wt%, 18 wt% and 24 wt% in the anode slurry proved to be crucial for the printing process. Regarding the rheological properties increasing binder content leads to increased viscosity and yield stress values promising printed structures with high aspect ratios. Consequently, interdigital 3D-printed micro anode structures with increasing aspect ratios were printed with increasing binder content. For printed 6-layer structures aspect ratios of 6.5 were achieved with anode slurries containing 24 wt% binder. Electrochemical results from planar coin cell measurements showed that anodes containing 12 wt% CMC/SBR binder content exhibited stable cycling at the highest charge capacities of 484 mA h g(−1) at a current rate of C/4. Furthermore, at 4C the cells showed high capacity retention of 89% compared to cycling at C/4. Based on this study and the given material formulation we recommend 18 wt% CMC/SBR as the best trade-off between electrochemical and rheological properties for future work with fully 3D-printed MLIBs.
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spelling pubmed-90545812022-05-04 Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique Drews, Mathias Tepner, Sebastian Haberzettl, Peter Gentischer, Harald Beichel, Witali Breitwieser, Matthias Vierrath, Severin Biro, Daniel RSC Adv Chemistry In this work we present for the first time high capacity silicon/carbon–graphite blend slurries designed for application in 3D-printed lithium ion microbatteries (3D-MLIBs). The correlation between electrochemical and rheological properties of the corresponding slurries was systematically investigated with the prospect of production by an automated dispensing process. A variation of the binder content (carboxymethyl cellulose/styrene–butadiene rubber, CMC/SBR) between 6 wt%, 12 wt%, 18 wt% and 24 wt% in the anode slurry proved to be crucial for the printing process. Regarding the rheological properties increasing binder content leads to increased viscosity and yield stress values promising printed structures with high aspect ratios. Consequently, interdigital 3D-printed micro anode structures with increasing aspect ratios were printed with increasing binder content. For printed 6-layer structures aspect ratios of 6.5 were achieved with anode slurries containing 24 wt% binder. Electrochemical results from planar coin cell measurements showed that anodes containing 12 wt% CMC/SBR binder content exhibited stable cycling at the highest charge capacities of 484 mA h g(−1) at a current rate of C/4. Furthermore, at 4C the cells showed high capacity retention of 89% compared to cycling at C/4. Based on this study and the given material formulation we recommend 18 wt% CMC/SBR as the best trade-off between electrochemical and rheological properties for future work with fully 3D-printed MLIBs. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9054581/ /pubmed/35514584 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra03161e Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Drews, Mathias
Tepner, Sebastian
Haberzettl, Peter
Gentischer, Harald
Beichel, Witali
Breitwieser, Matthias
Vierrath, Severin
Biro, Daniel
Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique
title Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique
title_full Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique
title_fullStr Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique
title_full_unstemmed Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique
title_short Towards 3D-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique
title_sort towards 3d-lithium ion microbatteries based on silicon/graphite blend anodes using a dispenser printing technique
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9054581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35514584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra03161e
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