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Effects of Various Conductive Additive and Polymeric Binder Contents on the Performance of a Lithium-Ion Composite Cathode

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date Published

10/2008

Authors

Liu, Gao, Honghe Zheng, S. Kim, Yonghong Deng, Andrew M. Minor, Xiangyun Song, Vincent S. Battaglia

DOI

10.1149/1.2976031(link is external)

Abstract

Fundamental electrochemical methods, cell performance tests, and physical characterization tests, such as electron microscopy, were used to study the effects of levels of the inert materials [acetylene black (AB), a nanoconductive additive, and polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF), a polymer binder] on the power performance of lithium-ion composite cathodes. The electronic conductivity of the AB/PVDF composites at different compositions was measured with a four-point probe direct current method. The electronic conductivity was found to increase rapidly and plateau at an AB:PVDF ratio 0.2:1 (by weight), with 0.8:1 being the highest conductivity composition. AB:PVDF compositions along the plateau of 0.2:1, 0.4:1, 0.6:1, and 0.8:1 were investigated. Electrodes of each of those compositions were fabricated with different fractions of AB/PVDF to active material. It was found that at the 0.8:1 AB:PVDF, the rate performance improved with increases in the AB/PVDF loading, whereas at the 0.2:1 AB:PVDF, the rate performance improved with decreases in the AB/PVDF loading. The impedance of electrodes made with 0.6:1 AB:PVDF was low and relatively invariant

Journal

Journal of The Electrochemical Society

Volume

155

Year of Publication

2008

Issue

12

Organization

Applied Energy Materials Group, Energy Storage Group, Energy Storage and Distributed Resources Division

Research Areas

Liu Lab

        

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