2014
DOI: 10.1039/c4cp03530e
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Mesoscopic modeling of Li insertion in phase-separating electrode materials: application to lithium iron phosphate

Abstract: A simple mesoscopic model is presented which accounts for the inhomogeneity of physical properties and bi-stable nature of phase-change insertion materials used in battery electrodes. The model does not include any geometric detail of the active material and discretizes the total active material domain into meso-scale units featuring basic thermodynamic (non-monotonic equilibrium potential as a function of Li content) and kinetic (insertion-de-insertion resistance) properties. With only these two factors incor… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(83 citation statements)
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“…Model parameters including the equilibrium potential and resistance distribution are somewhat different from those used in Ref. 49 as detailed later in this section. The mesoscopic model is embedded into porous-electrode theory (one-dimensional across the electrode thickness) to give a more realistic account of the electrode performance under various operating conditions.…”
Section: Model Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Model parameters including the equilibrium potential and resistance distribution are somewhat different from those used in Ref. 49 as detailed later in this section. The mesoscopic model is embedded into porous-electrode theory (one-dimensional across the electrode thickness) to give a more realistic account of the electrode performance under various operating conditions.…”
Section: Model Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the simplest approximation, the regular solution model (one-parameter Margules model) may be used to describe the thermodynamic state of each unit. 49 However, this model turns out to be too simple to capture the actual single-unit thermodynamic behavior of elementary units which is key for a realistic simulation of the charge/discharge dynamics of an LFP electrode. Consequently, we employ the following modified Margules expression for U k , which enables an asymmetric dependence of the excess free energy of the binary solution (i.e., solution of the inserted species and empty sites) on composition:…”
Section: Model Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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