A Data-Driven Multiscale Framework to Estimate Effective Properties of Lithium-Ion Batteries from Microstructure Images

The Bruggeman model is routinely employed to determine transport parameters in macroscale electrochemical models. Yet, it relies on both a simplified representation of the pore-scale structure and specific hypotheses on the transport dynamics at the pore scale. Furthermore, its inherent scalar natur...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transport in porous media 2020-08, Vol.134 (1), p.173-194
Hauptverfasser: Korneev, Svyatoslav, Arunachalam, Harikesh, Onori, Simona, Battiato, Ilenia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Bruggeman model is routinely employed to determine transport parameters in macroscale electrochemical models. Yet, it relies on both a simplified representation of the pore-scale structure and specific hypotheses on the transport dynamics at the pore scale. Furthermore, its inherent scalar nature prevents it from capturing the impact that pore-structure anisotropy has on transport. As a result, the complex topology of electrochemical storage devices, combined with the broad range of conditions in which batteries operate, renders the Bruggeman relationship approximate, at best. We propose a self-consistent multiscale framework, based on homogenization theory, which a priori allows one to calculate effective parameters of battery electrodes for a range of transport regimes while accounting for full topological information at the pore scale. The method is based on the solution of a closure problem on a translationally periodic unit cell and generalized to handle locally non-periodic structures. We compare the Bruggeman and the closure-problem predictions of the effective diffusivity for a set of 18,000 synthetically generated images and propose a data-driven polynomial function correlating porosity and effective diffusivity, as calculated from a solution of the closure problem. We test its predictive capability against measured diffusivity values in a LiCoO 2 cathode and a Ni-YSZ anode.
ISSN:0169-3913
1573-1634
DOI:10.1007/s11242-020-01441-w