Chapter 8 - Separators Flashcards

1
Q

What is the point of a separator?

A

Electrical insulation. Should prevent cathode and anode from touching each other.

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2
Q

What are the functions of a separator?

A
  • Electronic insulation
  • Chemical stability
  • Electrochemical stability
  • High mobility of positive ions (large porosity for liquid electrolyte or ion conductivity)
  • Thin (low weight, low electrolyte consumption)
  • Mechanically strong
  • No deformation during wetting with electrolyte or when heated
  • Homogenous (pore size, thickness, no holes)
  • Shut down function
  • Good behaviour after shut down
  • Environmentally friendly
  • Low cost
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3
Q

What happened with the Samsung Note 7?

A

Main cause: High welding burrs on the positive electrodes. Caused penetration of the insulation tape and separator, and shorted the battery.

Additional cause: Missing insulation tape on some batteries.

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4
Q

What are relevant material properties of separators?

A

Chemical stability, crystalline structure, hydrophilicity, thermal shrinkage, melting point, molecular weight

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5
Q

What are relevant structure properties of separators?

A

Thickness, porosity, pore size, pore shape, pore tortuosity, pore distribution

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6
Q

What are relevant physical properties of separators?

A

Electric resisitivty, air permeability, mechanical strength, thermal shutdown, electrolyte wettability, electrolyte retention

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7
Q

What is the typical thickness of a separator?

A

20-25 micrometers

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8
Q

What are some measurements of permeability?

A

Macmullin - ionic conductivity of electrolyte soaked separator vs value of electrolyte alone.

Gurley - permeability for air

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9
Q

What kind of separators are used?

A
Polyolefins
Non-woven film
Celgard 
Polyamide-reenforced PVdF
Dreamweaver
Composites
Gel-filled membranes
Anodic Aluminimum Oxide
PVDF (Polyvinylidene fluoride)
Polyacrylonitril
PMMA (Polymethyl methacrylate)
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10
Q

What are polyolefin separators?

A

Polyolefin are polymers of simple alkene monomers. The most common are polyethylene and polypropylene, often in combination.

They are characterised by molecular weight and crystallinity.

Can make microporous polyolefins with a dry and wet process.

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11
Q

How does degree of crystallinity affect polyolefin separators?

A

Low crystallinity = very liquid (0-20%)
Medium crystallinity = ductile thermoplastics (20-50%)
High crystallinity = rigid/brittle (>50%)

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12
Q

What is the difference between polyolefins obtained from a dry vs wet process?

A

Wet process gives more tortuous membrane. Reduces the probability of dendrite penetrating, and increases resistance.

Wet process also gives more symmetric tensile strength.

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13
Q

How can a mixing of polyolefin separators be used to protect against fire?

A

Melting point of PE is below that of PP. When temperature increases, PE melts, while PP maintains the structural integrity.

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14
Q

What kind of separator is the celgard?

A

It is a ceramic coated separator. The ceramic improves temperature resistance, and acts as a HF scavanger.

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15
Q

What are some pros and cons of non-woven films for separators?

A

Pros:
Good performance, low weight, high porosity, no direction selectivity of pores / fibres.

Cons:
Takes up much space, need much electrolyte. Large risk of particles penetrating. Large risk of dendrites penetrating.

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16
Q

What are some pros and cons of anodic aluminium oxide as a separator?

A

Pros:

  • Self-organised system
  • Very low tortuosity
  • Very high thermal stability

Cons:
- Brittle

17
Q

What are some ways we can physically modify the separators?

A
  • Fill pores with gel polymer electrolyte (increases wettability and retention of electrolyte)
  • Coating with surfactant (increases wettability)
  • Inorganic filler (e.g. SiO nanoparticles. Increases wettability and add mechanical separation in case of separator melting)
18
Q

What are some ways we can chemically modify the separators?

A
  • Covalent grafting of polar groups into separator surface (Increases hydrophilicity, increasing wettability)
19
Q

What are some pros and cons of a PVDF separator?

A

Pros:
Better wetting, retention and thermal properties than polyolefins

Cons:
Swells when filled with electrolyte. Possible side reactions with Li-salts forming LiF.

20
Q

What are some pros and cons of PAN separators?

A

Pros:
- Good processability, high thermal stability, high electrochemical stability. Polar C=N bond acts as Li+ channel, incrasing ion conductivity.

Cons:
- Suffer from electrolyte leakage during long term storage.

21
Q

What are some pros and cons of PMMA separators?

A

Pros:
- Good in almost all aspects

Cons:
- Poor mechanical strength - brittle.