Kyle R. Fenton
Sandia National Laboratories
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Featured researches published by Kyle R. Fenton.
Nano Letters | 2013
William C. Chueh; Farid El Gabaly; Joshua D. Sugar; N. C. Bartelt; Anthony H. McDaniel; Kyle R. Fenton; Kevin R. Zavadil; Tolek Tyliszczak; Wei Lai; Kevin F. McCarty
The intercalation pathway of lithium iron phosphate (LFP) in the positive electrode of a lithium-ion battery was probed at the ∼40 nm length scale using oxidation-state-sensitive X-ray microscopy. Combined with morphological observations of the same exact locations using transmission electron microscopy, we quantified the local state-of-charge of approximately 450 individual LFP particles over nearly the entire thickness of the porous electrode. With the electrode charged to 50% state-of-charge in 0.5 h, we observed that the overwhelming majority of particles were either almost completely delithiated or lithiated. Specifically, only ∼2% of individual particles were at an intermediate state-of-charge. From this small fraction of particles that were actively undergoing delithiation, we conclude that the time needed to charge a particle is ∼1/50 the time needed to charge the entire particle ensemble. Surprisingly, we observed a very weak correlation between the sequence of delithiation and the particle size, contrary to the common expectation that smaller particles delithiate before larger ones. Our quantitative results unambiguously confirm the mosaic (particle-by-particle) pathway of intercalation and suggest that the rate-limiting process of charging is initiating the phase transformation by, for example, a nucleation-like event. Therefore, strategies for further enhancing the performance of LFP electrodes should not focus on increasing the phase-boundary velocity but on the rate of phase-transformation initiation.
Nature Materials | 2014
Yiyang Li; Farid El Gabaly; Todd Richard Ferguson; Raymond B. Smith; N. C. Bartelt; Joshua D. Sugar; Kyle R. Fenton; Daniel A. Cogswell; A. L. David Kilcoyne; Tolek Tyliszczak; Martin Z. Bazant; William C. Chueh
Many battery electrodes contain ensembles of nanoparticles that phase-separate on (de)intercalation. In such electrodes, the fraction of actively intercalating particles directly impacts cycle life: a vanishing population concentrates the current in a small number of particles, leading to current hotspots. Reports of the active particle population in the phase-separating electrode lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4; LFP) vary widely, ranging from near 0% (particle-by-particle) to 100% (concurrent intercalation). Using synchrotron-based X-ray microscopy, we probed the individual state-of-charge for over 3,000 LFP particles. We observed that the active population depends strongly on the cycling current, exhibiting particle-by-particle-like behaviour at low rates and increasingly concurrent behaviour at high rates, consistent with our phase-field porous electrode simulations. Contrary to intuition, the current density, or current per active internal surface area, is nearly invariant with the global electrode cycling rate. Rather, the electrode accommodates higher current by increasing the active particle population. This behaviour results from thermodynamic transformation barriers in LFP, and such a phenomenon probably extends to other phase-separating battery materials. We propose that modifying the transformation barrier and exchange current density can increase the active population and thus the current homogeneity. This could introduce new paradigms to enhance the cycle life of phase-separating battery electrodes.
Advanced Materials | 2011
Jon F. Ihlefeld; Paul G. Clem; B.L. Doyle; Paul Gabriel Kotula; Kyle R. Fenton; Christopher A. Apblett
By utilizing an equilibrium processing strategy that enables co-firing of oxides and base metals, a means to integrate the lithium-stable fast lithium-ion conductor lanthanum lithium tantalate directly with a thin copper foil current collector appropriate for a solid-state battery is presented. This resulting thin-film electrolyte possesses a room temperature lithium-ion conductivity of 1.5 × 10(-5) S cm(-1) , which has the potential to increase the power of a solid-state battery over current state of the art.
Archive | 2018
Kyle R. Fenton; Eric Allcorn; Ganesan Nagasubramanian
The objectives of this report are as follows: elucidate degradation mechanisms, decomposition products, and abuse response for next generation silicon based anodes; and Understand the contribution of various materials properties and cell build parameters towards thermal runaway enthalpies. Quantify the contributions from particle size, composition, state of charge (SOC), electrolyte to active materials ratio, etc.
Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2016
Joshua Daniel Sugar; Farid El Gabaly; William C. Chueh; Kyle R. Fenton; Paul Gabriel Kotula; Velimir Radmilovic; N. C. Bartelt; Joseph T. McKeown; Andreas M. Glaeser; R. Gronsky
1 Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA, USA 2 Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA 3 Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA 4 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, USA 5 Materials Science and Engineering, University of CA, Berkeley, CA, USA 6 Nanotechnology and Functional Materials Center, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia
Archive | 2015
Kyle R. Fenton; Ganesan Nagasubramanian; Chad L. Staiger; Harry D. Pratt; Susan B. Rempe; Kevin Leung; Mangesh I. Chaudhari; Travis M. Anderson
This report describes advances in electrolytes for lithium primary battery systems. Electrolytes were synthesized that utilize organosilane materials that include anion binding agent functionality. Numerous materials were synthesized and tested in lithium carbon monofluoride battery systems for conductivity, impedance, and capacity. Resulting electrolytes were shown to be completely non-flammable and showed promise as co-solvents for electrolyte systems, due to low dielectric strength.
Advanced Energy Materials | 2013
Christopher J. Orendorff; Timothy N. Lambert; Carlos A. Chavez; Marlene Bencomo; Kyle R. Fenton
Electrochimica Acta | 2013
Ganesan Nagasubramanian; Kyle R. Fenton
Journal of Power Sources | 2014
Joshua D. Sugar; Farid El Gabaly; William C. Chueh; Kyle R. Fenton; Tolek Tyliszczak; Paul Gabriel Kotula; N. C. Bartelt
Archive | 2014
Jon F. Ihlefeld; Paul G. Clem; Cynthia Edney; David Ingersoll; Ganesan Nagasubramanian; Kyle R. Fenton