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Featured researches published by Yiyang Li.


Nature Materials | 2014

Current-induced transition from particle-by-particle to concurrent intercalation in phase-separating battery electrodes

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.


Science | 2016

Origin and hysteresis of lithium compositional spatiodynamics within battery primary particles

Jongwoo Lim; Yiyang Li; Daan Hein Alsem; Hongyun So; Sang-Chul Lee; Peng Bai; Daniel A. Cogswell; Xuzhao Liu; Norman Jin; Y. Yu; Norman Salmon; David A. Shapiro; Martin Z. Bazant; Tolek Tyliszczak; William C. Chueh

Watching batteries fail Rechargeable batteries lose capacity in part because of physical changes in the electrodes caused by electrochemical cycling. Lim et al. track the reaction dynamics of an electrode material, LiFePO4, by measuring the relative concentrations of Fe(II) and Fe(III) in it by means of high-resolution x-ray absorption spectrometry (see the Perspective by Schougaard). The exchange current density is then mapped for Li+ insertion and removal. At fast cycling rates, solid solutions form as Li+ is removed and inserted. However, at slow cycling rates, nanoscale phase separation occurs within battery particles, which eventually shortens battery life. Science, this issue p. 566; see also p. 543 X-ray microscopy shows the nanoscale evolution of the composition and reaction rate inside a Li-ion battery during cycling. The kinetics and uniformity of ion insertion reactions at the solid-liquid interface govern the rate capability and lifetime, respectively, of electrochemical devices such as Li-ion batteries. Using an operando x-ray microscopy platform that maps the dynamics of the Li composition and insertion rate in LixFePO4, we found that nanoscale spatial variations in rate and in composition control the lithiation pathway at the subparticle length scale. Specifically, spatial variations in the insertion rate constant lead to the formation of nonuniform domains, and the composition dependence of the rate constant amplifies nonuniformities during delithiation but suppresses them during lithiation, and moreover stabilizes the solid solution during lithiation. This coupling of lithium composition and surface reaction rates controls the kinetics and uniformity during electrochemical ion insertion.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Effects of Particle Size, Electronic Connectivity, and Incoherent Nanoscale Domains on the Sequence of Lithiation in LiFePO4 Porous Electrodes

Yiyang Li; Sophie Meyer; Jongwoo Lim; Sang-Chul Lee; William E. Gent; Stefano Marchesini; Harinarayan Krishnan; Tolek Tyliszczak; David A. Shapiro; A. L. D. Kilcoyne; William C. Chueh

High-resolution X-ray microscopy is used to investigate the sequence of lithiation in LiFePO4 porous electrodes. For electrodes with homogeneous interparticle electronic connectivity via the carbon black network, the smaller particles lithiate first. For electrodes with heterogeneous connectivity, the better-connected particles preferentially lithiate. Correlative electron and X-ray microscopy also reveal the presence of incoherent nanodomains that lithiate as if they are separate particles.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Persistent State-of-Charge Heterogeneity in Relaxed, Partially Charged Li1- x Ni1/3 Co1/3 Mn1/3 O2 Secondary Particles.

William E. Gent; Yiyang Li; Sungjin Ahn; Jongwoo Lim; Yijin Liu; Anna M. Wise; Chirranjeevi Balaji Gopal; David N. Mueller; Ryan Davis; Johanna Nelson Weker; Jin-Hwan Park; Seok-Kwang Doo; William C. Chueh

Ex situ transmission X-ray microscopy reveals micrometer-scale state-of-charge heterogeneity in solid-solution Li1- x Ni1/3 Co1/3 Mn1/3 O2 secondary particles even after extensive relaxation. The heterogeneity generates overcharged domains at the cutoff voltage, which may accelerate capacity fading and increase impedance with extended cycling. It is proposed that optimized secondary structures can minimize the state-of-charge heterogeneity by mitigating the buildup of nonuniform internal stresses associated with volume changes during charge.


Nature Communications | 2017

Coupling between oxygen redox and cation migration explains unusual electrochemistry in lithium-rich layered oxides

William E. Gent; Kipil Lim; Yufeng Liang; Qinghao Li; Taylor Barnes; Sungjin Ahn; Kevin H. Stone; Mitchell McIntire; Jihyun Hong; Jay Hyok Song; Yiyang Li; Apurva Mehta; Tolek Tyliszczak; David Kilcoyne; David Vine; Jin-Hwan Park; Seok-Kwang Doo; Michael F. Toney; Wanli Yang; David Prendergast; William C. Chueh

Lithium-rich layered transition metal oxide positive electrodes offer access to anion redox at high potentials, thereby promising high energy densities for lithium-ion batteries. However, anion redox is also associated with several unfavorable electrochemical properties, such as open-circuit voltage hysteresis. Here we reveal that in Li1.17–xNi0.21Co0.08Mn0.54O2, these properties arise from a strong coupling between anion redox and cation migration. We combine various X-ray spectroscopic, microscopic, and structural probes to show that partially reversible transition metal migration decreases the potential of the bulk oxygen redox couple by > 1 V, leading to a reordering in the anionic and cationic redox potentials during cycling. First principles calculations show that this is due to the drastic change in the local oxygen coordination environments associated with the transition metal migration. We propose that this mechanism is involved in stabilizing the oxygen redox couple, which we observe spectroscopically to persist for 500 charge/discharge cycles.Lithium ion battery electrodes employing anion redox exhibit high energy densities but suffer from poor cyclability. Here the authors reveal that the voltage of anion redox is strongly affected by structural changes that occur during battery cycling, explaining its unique electrochemical properties.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Electrode Lithiation: Effects of Particle Size, Electronic Connectivity, and Incoherent Nanoscale Domains on the Sequence of Lithiation in LiFePO4 Porous Electrodes (Adv. Mater. 42/2015)

Yiyang Li; Sophie Meyer; Jongwoo Lim; Sang-Chul Lee; William E. Gent; Stefano Marchesini; Harinarayan Krishnan; Tolek Tyliszczak; David A. Shapiro; A. L. D. Kilcoyne; William C. Chueh

On page 6591, W. Chueh and co-workers use high-resolution X-ray microscopy to study the sequence of lithiation in LiFePO4 battery electrodes and reveal that local electronic connectivity limits the rate capability. For electrodes with homogeneous interparticle electronic connectivity via the carbon black network, the smaller particles lithiate first. For electrodes with heterogeneous connectivity, the better-connected particles preferentially lithiate.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Low dose, limited energy spectroscopic x-ray microscopy

Johanna Nelson Weker; Yiyang Li; William C. Chueh

In order to achieve high quality in situ spectroscopic X-ray microscopy of complex systems far from equilibrium, such as lithium ion batteries under standard electrochemical cycling, careful consideration of the total number of energy points is required. Enough energy points are need to accurately determine the per pixel chemical information; however, total radiation dose needs to be limited to avoid damaging the system which would produce misleading results. Here we consider the number of energy points need to accurately reproduce the state of charge maps of a LiFePO2 electrode recorded during electrochemical cycling. We observe very good per pixel agreement using only 13 energy points. Additionally, we find the quality of the agreement is heavily dependent on the number of energy points used in the post edge fit during normalization of the spectra rather than the total number of energies used. Finally, we suggest a straightforward protocol for determining the minimum number of energy points needed prior to initiating any in situ spectroscopic X-ray microscopy experiment.


Nature Materials | 2018

Fluid-enhanced surface diffusion controls intraparticle phase transformations

Yiyang Li; Hungru Chen; Kipil Lim; Haitao D. Deng; Jongwoo Lim; Dimitrios Fraggedakis; Peter Attia; Sang-Chul Lee; Norman Jin; Jože Moškon; Zixuan Guan; William E. Gent; Jihyun Hong; Y. Yu; Miran Gaberšček; M. Saiful Islam; Martin Z. Bazant; William C. Chueh

Phase transformations driven by compositional change require mass flux across a phase boundary. In some anisotropic solids, however, the phase boundary moves along a non-conductive crystallographic direction. One such material is LiXFePO4, an electrode for lithium-ion batteries. With poor bulk ionic transport along the direction of phase separation, it is unclear how lithium migrates during phase transformations. Here, we show that lithium migrates along the solid/liquid interface without leaving the particle, whereby charge carriers do not cross the double layer. X-ray diffraction and microscopy experiments as well as ab initio molecular dynamics simulations show that organic solvent and water molecules promote this surface ion diffusion, effectively rendering LiXFePO4 a three-dimensional lithium-ion conductor. Phase-field simulations capture the effects of surface diffusion on phase transformation. Lowering surface diffusivity is crucial towards supressing phase separation. This work establishes fluid-enhanced surface diffusion as a key dial for tuning phase transformation in anisotropic solids.Phase transformations driven by compositional change require mass flux across a phase boundary. Lithium migration in LiXFePO4 along the solid/liquid interface now suggests that surface diffusion contributes to tuning phase transformation in anisotropic solids.


Nano Letters | 2017

Quantifying and Elucidating Thermally Enhanced Minority Carrier Diffusion Length Using Radius-Controlled Rutile Nanowires

Liming Zhang; Litianqi Sun; Zixuan Guan; Sang Chul Lee; Yingzhou Li; Haitao D. Deng; Yiyang Li; Nadia L. Ahlborg; Madhur Boloor; Nicholas A. Melosh; William C. Chueh

The minority carrier diffusion length (LD) is a crucial property that determines the performance of light absorbers in photoelectrochemical (PEC) cells. Many transition-metal oxides are stable photoanodes for solar water splitting but exhibit a small to moderate LD, ranging from a few nanometers (such as α-Fe2O3 and TiO2) to a few tens of nanometers (such as BiVO4). Under operating conditions, the temperature of PEC cells can deviate substantially from ambient, yet the temperature dependence of LD has not been quantified. In this work, we show that measuring the photocurrent as a function of both temperature and absorber dimensions provides a quantitative method for evaluating the temperature-dependent minority carrier transport. By measuring photocurrents of nonstoichiometric rutile TiO2-x nanowires as a function of wire radius (19-75 nm) and temperature (10-70 °C), we extract the minority carrier diffusion length along with its activation energy. The minority carrier diffusion length in TiO2-x increases from 5 nm at 25 °C to 10 nm at 70 °C, implying that enhanced carrier mobility outweighs the increase in the recombination rate with temperature. Additionally, by comparing the temperature-dependent photocurrent in BiVO4, TiO2, and α-Fe2O3, we conclude that the ratio of the minority carrier diffusion length to the depletion layer width determines the extent of temperature enhancement, and reconcile the widespread temperature coefficients, which ranged from 0.6 to 1.7% K-1. This insight provides a general design rule to select light absorbers for large thermally activated photocurrents and to predict PEC cell characteristics at a range of temperatures encountered during realistic device operation.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2017

Using Scanning Transmission X-ray Microscopy to Reveal the Origin of Lithium Compositional Spatiodynamics in Battery Materials

Jongwoo Lim; Yiyang Li; Daan Hein Alsem; Hongyun So; Sang Chul Lee; Peng Bai; Daniel A. Cogswell; Xuzhao Liu; Norman Jin; Y. Yu; Norman Salmon; David J. Shapiro; Martin Z. Bazant; Tolek Tyliszczak; William C. Chueh

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA. 2. Stanford Institute for Materials & Energy Sciences, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, CA, USA 3. Hummingbird Scientific, Lacey, WA, USA. 4. Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA. 5. Department of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA 6. Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA 7. Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA. 8. SUNCAT Interfacial Science and Catalysis, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

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Tolek Tyliszczak

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Daniel A. Cogswell

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David A. Shapiro

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Martin Z. Bazant

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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