Abstract
The origins of performance degradation in batteries can be traced to atomistic phenomena, accumulated at mesoscale dimensions, and compounded up to the level of electrode architectures. Hyperspectral X-ray spectromicroscopy techniques allow for the mapping of compositional variations, and phase separation across length scales with high spatial and energy resolution. We demonstrate the design of workflows combining singular value decomposition, principal-component analysis, k-means clustering, and linear combination fitting, in conjunction with a curated spectral database, to develop high-accuracy quantitative compositional maps of the effective depth of discharge across individual positive electrode particles and ensembles of particles. Using curated reference spectra, accurate and quantitative mapping of inter- and intraparticle compositional heterogeneities, phase separation, and stress gradients is achieved for a canonical phase-transforming positive electrode material, α-V2O5. Phase maps from single-particle measurements are used to reconstruct directional stress profiles showcasing the distinctive insights accessible from a standards-informed application of high-dimensional chemical imaging.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 100634 |
| Journal | Patterns |
| Volume | 3 |
| Issue number | 12 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Dec 9 2022 |
Keywords
- DSML3: Development/pre-production: Data science output has been rolled out/validated across multiple domains/problems
- battery materials
- cathodes
- chemo-mechanics
- database
- hyperspectral imaging
- image analytics
- multivariate data analytics
- singular value decomposition
- vanadium oxide
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