Thermal relaxation of lithium dendrites

Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2015 Mar 28;17(12):8000-5. doi: 10.1039/c4cp05786d.

Abstract

The average lengths λ̅ of lithium dendrites produced by charging symmetric Li(0) batteries at various temperatures are matched by Monte Carlo computations dealing both with Li(+) transport in the electrolyte and thermal relaxation of Li(0) electrodeposits. We found that experimental λ̅(T) variations cannot be solely accounted by the temperature dependence of Li(+) mobility in the solvent but require the involvement of competitive Li-atom transport from metastable dendrite tips to smoother domains over ΔE(++)(R) ∼ 20 kJ mol(-1) barriers. A transition state theory analysis of Li-atom diffusion in solids yields a negative entropy of activation for the relaxation process: ΔS(++)(R) ≈ -46 J mol(-1) K(-1) that is consistent with the transformation of amorphous into crystalline Li(0) electrodeposits. Significantly, our ΔE(++)(R) ∼ 20 kJ mol(-1) value compares favorably with the activation barriers recently derived from DFT calculations for self-diffusion on Li(0)(001) and (111) crystal surfaces. Our findings suggest a key role for the mobility of interfacial Li-atoms in determining the morphology of dendrites at temperatures above the onset of surface reconstruction: TSR ≈ 0.65 TMB (TMB = 453 K: the melting point of bulk Li(0)).