Despite numerous experimental and theoretical investigations of the mechanical behavior of high-capacity Si and Ge Li-ion battery anodes, our basic understanding of swelling-driven fracture in these materials remains limited. Existing… Click to show full abstract
Despite numerous experimental and theoretical investigations of the mechanical behavior of high-capacity Si and Ge Li-ion battery anodes, our basic understanding of swelling-driven fracture in these materials remains limited. Existing theoretical studies have provided insights into elasto-plastic deformations caused by large volume change phase transformations, but have not modeled fracture explicitly beyond Griffith’s criterion. Here, we use a multi-physics phase-field approach to model self-consistently anisotropic phase transformation, elasto-plastic deformation, and crack initiation and propagation during lithiation of Si nanopillars. Our computational results reveal that fracture occurs within a “vulnerable window” inside the two-dimensional parameter space of yield strength and fracture energy and highlight the importance of taking into account the surface localization of plastic deformation to accurately predict the magnitude of tensile stresses at the onset of fracture. They further demonstrate how the increased robustness of hollow nanopillars can be understood as a direct effect of anode geometry on the size of this vulnerable window. Those insights provide an improved theoretical basis for designing next-generation mechanically stable phase-transforming battery materials undergoing large volume changes.
               
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