Investigating the Chemical Reactivity of Lithium Silicate Model SEI Layers
2020
Coyle, Jaclyn E. | Brumbach, Michael T. | Veith, Gabriel M. | Apblett, Christopher A.
Silicon anodes suffer from an unstable solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) layer that contributes to undesirable capacity fade with cycling. A key part to addressing this unstable SEI formation is to examine how certain components of the SEI react with the electrolyte over time. One SEI component that has not been thoroughly studied in the context of the chemical reactivity against the electrolyte is lithiated silicate. Four model silicate thin films with increasing lithium content were deposited by radio frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering to study how the lithiation of the native oxide on a silicon anode affects the chemical stability of the anode surface. SiO₂, Li₂Si₂O₅, Li₂SiO₃, and Li₃SiOₓ films were exposed to 1.2 M LiPF₆ in the 3:7 wt % ethylene carbonate/ethyl methyl carbonate (EC/EMC) electrolyte for periods of time that are representative of the amount of time it takes to undergo cell formations. Soaked samples were rinsed, dried, and characterized by a combination of attenuated total reflectance-infrared spectroscopy (ATR-IR), focused ion beam-secondary electron microscopy (FIB-SEM), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) depth profiling. It was found that the rate of the decrease in film thickness of the silicates exposed to the electrolyte over time increases as a function of the lithium content in the thin film. This reaction involves HF etching and LiPF₆ salt degradation leading to silicate loss and fluorination throughout the bulk. Understanding this chemical instability is critical to determining the overall mechanism of SEI degradation over time.
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