Co-reporter:Chuting Tan, Nicholas H. Bashian, Chase W. Hemmelgarn, Wesley J. Thio, Daniel J. Lyons, Yuan F. Zheng, Lei R. Cao, Anne C. Co
Journal of Power Sources 2017 Volume 357(Volume 357) pp:
Publication Date(Web):31 July 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.jpowsour.2017.04.098
•In-situ temperature controlled battery testing under direct gamma radiation.•Direct gamma radiation show no immediate battery degradation.•Gamma radiation induced latent effects leads to battery performance loss.•Shortened battery calendar life and cyclability after gamma exposure.•Physical changes in the separator observed when directly exposed to gamma radiation.Radiation effects induced by gamma rays on battery performance were investigated by measuring the capacity and resistance of a series of battery coin cells in-situ directly under gamma radiation and ex-situ. An experimental setup was developed to charge and discharge batteries directly under gamma radiation, equipped with precise temperature control, at The Ohio State University Nuclear Reactor Lab. Latent effects induced by gamma radiation on battery components directly influence their performance. Charge and discharge capacity and overall resistance throughout a time span of several weeks post irradiation were monitored and compared to control groups. It was found that exposure to gamma radiation does not significantly alter the available capacity and the overall cell resistance immediately, however, battery performance significantly decreases with time post irradiation. Also, batteries exposed to a higher cumulative dose showed close-to-zero capacity at two-week post irradiation.Download high-res image (232KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Chuting Tan, Daniel J. Lyons, Ke Pan, Kwan Yee Leung, William C. Chuirazzi, Marcello Canova, Anne C. Co, Lei R. Cao
Journal of Power Sources 2016 Volume 318() pp:242-250
Publication Date(Web):30 June 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.jpowsour.2016.04.015
•Gamma radiation effects on cathode or electrolyte of Li-ion batteries were studied.•Radiation leads to capacity fade, impedance growth, and premature battery failure.•Electrolyte color changes gradually after initially receiving radiation dose.•Polymerization and HF formation could be the cause of the latent effects.The performance degradation and durability of a Li-ion battery is a major concern when it is operated under radiation conditions, for instance, in deep space exploration, in high radiation field, or rescuing or sampling equipment in a post-nuclear accident scenario. This paper examines the radiation effects on the electrode and electrolyte materials separately and their effects on a battery's capacity loss and resistance increase. A60Co irradiator (34.3 krad/h) was used to provide 0.8, 4.1, and 9.8 Mrad dose to LiFePO4 electrodes and 0.8, 1.6, and 5.7 Mrad to 1 M LiPF6 in 1:1 wt% EC:DMC electrolytes. This study shows that the coin cells assembled with irradiated components have higher failure rate (ca. 70%) than that of control group (ca. 14%). A significant battery capacity fade post irradiation was observed. The electrolyte also shows a darkened color a few weeks or months after irradiation. The discovery of this latent effect may be significant because a battery may degrade significantly even showing no sign of degradation immediately after exposure. We investigated electrolyte composition by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy prior and post irradiation. Polymerization reactions and HF formation are considered as the cause of the discoloration.