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Main Authors: Bai, Shuang, Liu, Zhao, Cheng, Diyi, Lu, Bingyu, Zaluzec, Nestor J., Raghavendran, Ganesh, Wang, Shen, Marchese, Thomas S., van Leer, Brandon, Li, Letian, Jiang, Lin, Stokes, Adam, Cline, Joseph P., Osmundsen, Rachel, Barends, Paul, Bright, Alexander, Zhang, Minghao, Meng, Ying Shirley
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.19376
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author Bai, Shuang
Liu, Zhao
Cheng, Diyi
Lu, Bingyu
Zaluzec, Nestor J.
Raghavendran, Ganesh
Wang, Shen
Marchese, Thomas S.
van Leer, Brandon
Li, Letian
Jiang, Lin
Stokes, Adam
Cline, Joseph P.
Osmundsen, Rachel
Barends, Paul
Bright, Alexander
Zhang, Minghao
Meng, Ying Shirley
author_facet Bai, Shuang
Liu, Zhao
Cheng, Diyi
Lu, Bingyu
Zaluzec, Nestor J.
Raghavendran, Ganesh
Wang, Shen
Marchese, Thomas S.
van Leer, Brandon
Li, Letian
Jiang, Lin
Stokes, Adam
Cline, Joseph P.
Osmundsen, Rachel
Barends, Paul
Bright, Alexander
Zhang, Minghao
Meng, Ying Shirley
contents To unlock the full potential of lithium metal batteries, a deep understanding of lithium metal reactivity and its solid electrolyte interphase is essential. Correlative imaging, combining focused ion beam and electron microscopy offers a powerful approach for multi-scale characterization. However, the extreme reactivity of lithium metal and its SEI presents challenges in investigating deposition and stripping mechanisms. In this work, we systematically evaluated the storage stability of lithium metal in glovebox before and after electrochemical deposition. We then assessed different FIB ion sources for their impact on lithium metal lamella preparation for transmission electron microscopy. Furthermore, we examined cryogenic-TEM transfer methods, optimizing for minimal contamination during sample handling. Contrary to prior assumptions, we demonstrate that high resolution imaging of pure lithium metal at room temperature is achievable using inert gas transfer with an electron dose rate exceeding 1000 e/A2/s, without significant detectable damage. In contrast, SEI components, such as Li2CO3 and LiF display much greater sensitivity to electron beams, requiring cryogenic conditions and precise dose control for nano/atomic scale imaging. We quantified electron dose limits for these SEI components to track their structural evolution under irradiation. Based on these findings, we propose a robust protocol for lithium metal sample handling - from storage to atomic-level characterization - minimizing damage and contamination. This work paves the way for more accurate and reproducible studies, accelerating the development of next-generation lithium metal batteries by ensuing the preservation of native material properties during analysis.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2412_19376
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Guidelines for Correlative Imaging and Analysis of Reactive Lithium Metal Battery Materials
Bai, Shuang
Liu, Zhao
Cheng, Diyi
Lu, Bingyu
Zaluzec, Nestor J.
Raghavendran, Ganesh
Wang, Shen
Marchese, Thomas S.
van Leer, Brandon
Li, Letian
Jiang, Lin
Stokes, Adam
Cline, Joseph P.
Osmundsen, Rachel
Barends, Paul
Bright, Alexander
Zhang, Minghao
Meng, Ying Shirley
Materials Science
To unlock the full potential of lithium metal batteries, a deep understanding of lithium metal reactivity and its solid electrolyte interphase is essential. Correlative imaging, combining focused ion beam and electron microscopy offers a powerful approach for multi-scale characterization. However, the extreme reactivity of lithium metal and its SEI presents challenges in investigating deposition and stripping mechanisms. In this work, we systematically evaluated the storage stability of lithium metal in glovebox before and after electrochemical deposition. We then assessed different FIB ion sources for their impact on lithium metal lamella preparation for transmission electron microscopy. Furthermore, we examined cryogenic-TEM transfer methods, optimizing for minimal contamination during sample handling. Contrary to prior assumptions, we demonstrate that high resolution imaging of pure lithium metal at room temperature is achievable using inert gas transfer with an electron dose rate exceeding 1000 e/A2/s, without significant detectable damage. In contrast, SEI components, such as Li2CO3 and LiF display much greater sensitivity to electron beams, requiring cryogenic conditions and precise dose control for nano/atomic scale imaging. We quantified electron dose limits for these SEI components to track their structural evolution under irradiation. Based on these findings, we propose a robust protocol for lithium metal sample handling - from storage to atomic-level characterization - minimizing damage and contamination. This work paves the way for more accurate and reproducible studies, accelerating the development of next-generation lithium metal batteries by ensuing the preservation of native material properties during analysis.
title Guidelines for Correlative Imaging and Analysis of Reactive Lithium Metal Battery Materials
topic Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.19376