Lithiation-induced embrittlement of multiwalled carbon nanotubes. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Lithiation of individual multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) was conducted in situ inside a transmission electron microscope. Upon lithiation, the intertube spacing increased from 3.4 to 3.6 , corresponding to about 5.9% radial and circumferential expansions and 50 GPa tensile hoop stress on the outermost tube wall. The straight tube walls became distorted after lithiation. In situ compression and tension tests show that the lithiated MWCNTs were brittle with sharp fracture edges. Such a failure mode is in stark contrast with that of the pristine MWCNTs which are extremely flexible and fail in a "sword-in-sheath" manner upon tension. The lithiation-induced embrittlement is attributed to the mechanical effect of a "point-force" action posed by the intertubular lithium that induces the stretch of carbon-carbon bonds in addition to that by applied strain, as well as the chemical effect of electron transfer from lithium to the antibonding orbital that weakens the carbon-carbon bond. The combined mechanical and chemical weakening leads to a considerable decrease of the fracture strain in lithiated MWCNTs. Our results provide direct evidence and understanding of the degradation mechanism of carbonaceous anodes in lithium ion batteries.

published proceedings

  • ACS Nano

author list (cited authors)

  • Liu, Y., Zheng, H. e., Liu, X. H., Huang, S., Zhu, T., Wang, J., ... Huang, J. Y.

citation count

  • 111

complete list of authors

  • Liu, Yang||Zheng, He||Liu, Xiao Hua||Huang, Shan||Zhu, Ting||Wang, Jiangwei||Kushima, Akihiro||Hudak, Nicholas S||Huang, Xu||Zhang, Sulin||Mao, Scott X||Qian, Xiaofeng||Li, Ju||Huang, Jian Yu

publication date

  • September 2011