[Technical Field]
[0001] This application claims priority to and the benefit of Korean Patent Application
No.
10-2015-0001838 filed in the Korean Intellectual Property Office on January 7, 2015.
[0002] The present invention relates to a negative active material for a secondary battery
and a second battery using the same.
[Background Art]
[0003] EP 2 595 223 A2 discloses a negative electrode material for lithium ion batteries, especially useful
in high-capacity applications.
[0004] A lithium battery in the related art uses a lithium metal as a negative active material,
but when a lithium metal is used, a battery is short-circuited by formation of dendrite
to cause danger of explosion, so that a carbon-based material is widely used as a
negative active material, instead of a lithium metal.
[0005] The carbon-based active material includes crystalline carbon, such as graphite and
synthetic graphite, and amorphous carbon, such as soft carbon and hard carbon. However,
the amorphous carbon has a large capacity, but has a problem in large irreversibility
during a charge/discharge process. Graphite is representatively used as the crystalline
carbon, and has a theoretical limit capacity of 372 mAh/g, which is large, so that
is used as a negative active material.
[0006] However, even though a theoretical capacity of the graphite or the carbon-based active
material is slightly large, the theoretical capacity is simply about 380 mAh/g, so
that there is a problem in that the aforementioned negative electrode cannot be used
when a large capacity lithium battery is future developed.
[0007] In order to solve the problem, research on a metal-based or intermetallic compound-based
negative active material has been currently and actively conducted. For example, research
on a lithium battery utilizing metal, such as aluminum, germanium, silicon, tin, zinc,
and lead, or semimetal as a negative active material has been conducted. The material
has a large capacity and a high energy density, and is capable of occluding and discharging
larger lithium ions than the negative active material using the carbon-based material,
so that it is possible to manufacture a battery having a large capacity and a high
energy density. For example, it is known that pure silicon has a large theoretical
capacity of 4,017 mAh/g.
[0008] However, compared to the carbon-based material, the metal-based or intermetallic
compound-based negative active material has a cycle characteristic degradation to
be obstacles to commercialization. The reason is that when the silicon is used as
a negative active material for occluding and discharging lithium as it is, conductivity
between active materials may deteriorate due to a change in a volume during a charge/discharge
process, or a negative active material is peeled from a negative current collector.
That is, the silicon included in the negative active material occludes lithium by
charging and is expanded to have a volume of about 300 to 400%, and when lithium is
discharged during the discharge, mineral particles are contracted.
[0009] When the aforementioned charge/discharge cycle is repeated, electric insulation may
be incurred due to a crack of the negative active material, so that a lifespan of
the lithium battery is sharply decreased. Accordingly, the aforementioned metal-based
negative active material has a problem to be used in the lithium battery.
[0010] In order to solve the aforementioned problem, research on a negative active material
having a buffering effect against a volume change by using particles having a nano
size level as silicon particles or giving porosity to silicon is conducted.
[0011] Korean Patent Application Laid-Open No.
2004-0063802 relates to "Negative Active Material for Lithium Secondary Battery, Method of Manufacturing
the Same, and Lithium Secondary Battery", and adopts a method of alloying silicon
and another metal, such as nickel, and then eluting the metal, and Korean Patent Application
Laid-Open No.
2004-0082876 relates to "Method of Manufacturing Porous Silicon and Nano-size Silicon Particle,
and Application of Porous Silicon and Nano-size Silicon Particle as Negative Electrode
Material for Lithium Secondary Battery", and discloses technology of mixing alkali
metal or alkali earth metal in a powder state with silicon precursor, such as silicon
dioxide, performing heat treatment on a mixture, and eluting the mixture as acid.
[0012] The patent applications may improve an initial capacity maintenance rate by a buffering
effect according to a porous structure, but simply use porous silicon particles having
conductivity deterioration, so that when the particles do not have a nano size, conductivity
between the particles is degraded while manufacturing an electrode, thereby causing
a problem of deterioration of initial efficiency or a capacity maintenance characteristic.
[Disclosure]
[Technical Problem]
[0013] The present invention has been made in an effort to provide a negative active material
for a lithium secondary battery, of which a change in a volume is small during charge/discharge,
so that electric insulation is less incurred.
[0014] The present invention has also been made in an effort to provide a negative active
material for a lithium secondary battery having excellent initial efficiency and an
excellent capacity maintenance characteristic.
[0015] The present invention has also been made in an effort to provide an optimized negative
active material in consideration of an amorphization degree when designing a battery.
[Technical Solution]
[0016] The present invention provides a negative active material for a secondary battery,
as defined in claim 1.
[0017] An amorphization degree of a fine crystalline region on a matrix within the alloy
is25% or more and an expansion rate of the negative active material after 50 cycles
may have a range of 70 to 150%.
[0018] Al in the negative active material for the secondary battery has a range of 5 to
19% based on atom(%) (at%).
[0019] Al in the negative active material for the secondary battery may have a range of
10 to 19% based on at(%).
[0020] Each of Ti and Fe in the negative active material for the secondary battery may have
a range of 9 to 12.5% based on at(%).
[0021] A discharge capacity of the negative active material for the secondary battery after
50 cycles may be 90% or more compared to an initial discharge capacity.
[0022] Efficiency of the negative active material for the secondary battery after 50 cycles
may be 98% or more.
[0023] Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention provides a secondary battery,
including: a negative electrode including a negative active material, a positive electrode;
and an electrolyte, and the negative active material is an alloy formed by a chemical
formula below, and a ratio of Ti to Fe in the negative active material for the secondary
battery has 1:1, and a ratio of Si : Ti or Si : Fe in the negative active material
for the secondary battery has a range of 5:1 to 9:1, and Si has a range of 60 to 70%,
Ti has a range of 9 to 14%, Fe has a range of 9 to 14%, and Al has a range of 5 to
19% based on at(%).
[0024] Chemical Formula: Si
xTi
yFe
zAl
u (x, y, z, and u are at%, x: 1-(y+z+u), y: 0.09 to 0.14, z: 0.09 to 0.14, and u: 0.05
to 0.19)
[Advantageous Effects]
[0025] According to the present invention, it is possible to obtain the negative active
material for a lithium secondary battery, which has a small change in a volume during
charge/discharge, so that electric insulation is less incurred, and has excellent
initial efficiency and an excellent capacity maintenance characteristic.
[0026] Further, the present invention may provide a value of an amorphization degree of
the optimized negative active material in designing a battery through a measurement
of an expansion rate after 50 cycles.
[0027] Further, the present invention may provide the optimized negative active material
in consideration of an amorphization degree when designing a battery.
[Description of Drawings]
[0028]
FIGS. 1A, 1B, and 1C are tissue pictures of an expansion characteristic measured after
50 cycles for a negative active material according to the Comparative Examples.
FIG. 2 is a tissue picture of an expansion characteristic measured after 50 cycles
for a negative active material according to the Examples of the present invention.
FIGS. 3A and 3B are diagrams illustrating measurement of an amorphization degree of
the negative active material according to the Examples of the present invention.
[Best Mode]
[0029] The present invention provides a negative active material for a secondary battery,
as defined in claim 1.
[Mode for Invention]
[0030] Other detailed matters of the exemplary embodiments are included in the detailed
description and the drawings.
[0031] Various advantages and features of the present disclosure and methods accomplishing
thereof will become apparent from the following detailed description of exemplary
embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings. However, the present invention
is not limited by the exemplary embodiments disclosed below, but may be implemented
in various forms. Throughout this specification and the claims that follow, when it
is described that an element is "coupled" to another element, the element may be "directly
coupled" to the other element or "electrically coupled" to the other element through
a third element. Further, an irrelevant part to the present invention is omitted to
clarify the description of the present invention, and like reference numerals designate
like elements throughout the specification.
[0032] Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in detail with reference to
the accompanying drawings.
[0033] An exemplary embodiment of the present invention provides a negative active material
for a secondary battery with an improved expansion rate, and a secondary battery including
the same. Particularly, according to the present invention, it is possible to obtain
a negative active material for a secondary battery, in which an amorphization degree
of a fine crystalline region on a matrix within an alloy is 25% or more, in the negative
active material.
[0034] In general, when a silicon-based negative active material is studied, it is measured
how much an electrode plate thickness during a full charge at the first cycle after
a formation process is increased compared to an initial electrode plate thickness
(an electrode plate thickness before an electrolyte is injected). That is, an expansion
rate after one cycle is measured, and here, a change in volume of the negative active
material is exhibited while the negative active material occludes lithium.
[0035] However, in the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, an expansion rate
after 50 cycles was measured by measuring a thickness of an electrode plate after
repeat of charge and discharge for 50 cycles, not one cycle, and comparing the measured
thickness and an initial electrode plate thickness. Through the measurement of the
expansion rate after 50 cycles, it is possible to monitor a change in volume according
to occlusion and discharge of lithium and a generation degree of a Solid Electrolyte
Interface or Interphase (SEI) layer which is piled while an electrolyte is decomposed
by a side reaction generated on a surface of an active material.
[0036] When a characteristic of a silicon-based negative active material is evaluated by
fabricating a coin half cell, a lithium metal electrode used as a counter electrode
generally begins to deteriorate after 50 cycles, thereby influencing a result. Accordingly,
in the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a change in a thickness of an
electrode plate is measured by deconstructing a coin cell after the evaluation of
a lifespan for 50 cycles, so that not only expansion of an initial electrode plate
by simple lithium occlusion but also expansion of an electrode plate according to
growth of a side reaction layer for subsequent 50 cycles are taken as indexes of an
evaluation of performance of a negative active material. Accordingly, in the exemplary
embodiment of the present invention, it was found that a change in an expansion rate
after 50 cycles is a considerably meaningful evaluation index, and thus it was possible
to derive an optimum component range.
[0037] Commonly, for graphite, a very stable SEI layer is generated at an initial formation
charging stage, and a change in volume of an electrode plate is 20% or less after
an initial charging stage, so that the SEI layer tends to be maintained at the initial
charging stage as it is without a distinct change. However, in a silicon-based negative
active material, a change in volume of an electrode plate is large, so that a phenomenon,
in which a surface of a new active material is exposed to an electrolyte while an
SEI layer, which is initially generated on a surface of the active material, is separated
when the active material is contracted, and a new SEI layer is generated on the surface
during next expansion, is repeated, so that a side reaction layer, which is a very
thick SEI layer, is developed.
[0038] The side reaction layer piled on the surface of the active material serves as a resistor
and disturbs a movement of lithium within the secondary battery, and the electrolyte
is consumed for forming the side reaction layer, thereby causing a problem in that
a lifespan of a battery is decreased. Further, an increase in a thickness of the electrode
plate according to the development of the side reaction layer causes physical deformation
of a jelly-roll of the battery, and a current is concentrated to a partial area of
the electrode plate, thereby causing a phenomenon in that the battery is rapidly degraded.
[0039] For a silicon alloy material in the related art, there is a case where a matrix exists
within the active material as it is while charge and discharge are repeated, and only
a silicon part is contracted and expanded, so that a crack is generated between the
matrix and silicon. In this case, it is found that an electrolyte permeates the crack
and a side reaction layer of the electrolyte is generated within the active material,
so that the active material is dispersed, and in this case, a sharp increase in a
thickness of the electrode plate after 50 cycles is observed.
[0040] This phenomenon cannot be found during the measurement of the thickness of the electrode
plate after one cycle, and implies that even though the silicon-alloy material has
an excellent initial expansion rate, when the silicon alloy material is actually applied
to a battery, the silicon alloy material may cause various problems, such as an increase
in internal resistance within the battery and depletion of the electrolyte. Accordingly,
the expansion of the electrode plate after 50 cycles suggested in the present exemplary
embodiment is a very useful evaluation index for evaluating expansion, contraction,
and side reaction phenomena of the active material when developing a silicon-based
negative active material.
[0041] In the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a size of an expansion rate
after 50 cycles is investigated according to a composition of a metal compound for
a negative active material used in the exemplary embodiment of the present invention
to derive a range of an optimum expansion rate according to a change in composition.
[0042] In the meantime, according to the present invention, a fine crystalline region exists
on a matrix of an alloy, thereby making lithium be more easily dispersed. Further,
a rate of the existence of the fine crystalline region is represented by an amorphization
degree, and the amorphous region is formed on the matrix, so that a volume expansion
while charging the secondary battery may be restricted.
[0043] The present invention is characterized in that an amorphization degree of the fine
crystalline region on the matrix is 25% or more. When the amorphization degree is
formed within the range, lithium is considerably easily dispersed. Further, it can
be seen that an expansion rate after 50 cycles is also excellently exhibited within
the aforementioned range of the amorphization degree, and thus, when the aforementioned
material is used as a negative active material, volume expansion is restricted during
charging.
[0044] According to the present invention, an amorphization degree is 25% or more when an
XRD pattern rotation angle of an alloy 2θ is in a range of 20° to 100°. Within the
range of the amorphization degree, the volume expansion is restricted, so that electric
insulation is generated well.
[0045] A calculation of an amorphization degree used in the present invention is as follows,
and an amorphization degree is calculated according to the illustration of FIG. 3.

[0046] In the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a large amorphization degree
means that there are many fine crystalline regions, and thus, lithium ions are accumulated
by a buffering effect in the fine crystalline region during charging, so that it is
possible to obtain an effect in that a main factor of a volume expansion is restricted.
[0047] Further, in the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, an expansion rate
after 50 cycles has a range of 70 to 150%, and a negative active material for a secondary
battery formed by an equation below is provided.
Si
xTi
yFe
zAl
u .............................. (1)
(x, y, z, and u are atom% (at%), x : 1-(y+z+u), y : 0.09 to 0.14, z : 0.09 to 0.14,
and u: 0.05 to 0.19) Si has a range of 60 to 70% and Ti and Fe have a range of 9 to
14% based on at%. However, Al has a range of 5 to 19%.
[0048] Ti and Fe included in the alloy is bonded to Si to form an intermetallic compound
of Si
2TiFe. Accordingly, when a content of each of Ti and Fe is 14 at%, 28 at% or more of
Si is consumed for forming the intermetallic compound, so that a capacity of Si per
g of the active material is decreased, and in this case, in order to obtain Si with
a capacity of 1,000 mAh/g or more, the content of Si inserted needs to be considerably
increased.
[0049] In general, when a large amount of Si that is a semimetal is contained, viscosity
of a molten metal is high during melting, and thus rapid solidification workability
becomes poor, so that the content of Si is maintained within a range of 70% as possible
as it can, and thus, the contents of Ti and Fe do not exceed 14%. According to the
present invention, it was derived that it is required to decrease the contents of
Ti and Fe to 14% or less during a process of drawing an optimum alloy component in
relation to an expansion rate.
[0050] Not according to the invention, Al may have a range larger than 1% and less than
20% based on at%. When about 1% of Al is included, expansion of the active material
is severely incurred after 50 cycles, and the active material is dispersed, so that
about 1% of Al is not preferable. Further, not according to the invention, when 20%
of Al is included, a discharge capacity is decreased by a change in a volume fraction
of Si: matrix, so that 20% of Al is not preferable According to the present invention,
it was derived that when Al has a range of 5 to 19% based on at%, the active material
has a range of the most preferable expansion rate, and it could be seen that a discharge
capacity is not decreased within the range of 5 to 19%. Most preferably, Al is 10
to 19%, and it is possible to obtain the range of a most preferable 50 cycle expansion
rate, and further a discharge capacity is not decreased.
[0051] Further, a method of preparing the negative active material of the present invention
is not particularly limited, and for example, various fine powder preparing methods
(a gas atomizer method, a centrifugal gas atomizer method, a plasma atomizer method,
a rotating electrode method, and a mechanical alloying method) publicly known in the
art may be used as the method. In the present invention, it is possible to prepare
an active material by applying, for example, a single roll rapid solidification method
of mixing Si and a component forming the matrix, melting a mixture by an arc melting
method, and the like, and then spraying the melt to a rotating copper roll. However,
a method applied in the present invention is not limited to the aforementioned method,
and as long as a method may sufficiently obtain a rapid solidification speed, other
than the single roll rapid solidification method, the aforementioned suggested fine
powder preparing method (the gas atomizer method, the centrifugal gas atomizer method,
the plasma atomizer method, the rotating electrode method, and the mechanical alloying
method) may be used.
[0052] Further, it is possible to manufacture a secondary battery by using the negative
active material according to the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, and
the secondary battery may include a lithiated intercalation compound as a positive
electrode, and further, inorganic sulfur (S
8, elemental sulfur) and a sulfur compound may be used, and examples of the sulfur
compound include Li
2S
n (n ≥ 1), Li
2S
n (n ≥ 1) melt in catholyte, and an organic sulfur compound or a carbon-sulfur polymer
((C
2S
f)
n, f = 2.5 to 50, n ≥ 2).
[0053] Further, the kind of electrolyte included in the secondary battery of the present
invention is not particularly limited, and a general means publicly known in the art
is adoptable. In one example of the present invention, the electrolyte may include
a nonaqueous organic solvent and lithium salt. The lithium salt is melt in an organic
solvent, so that the lithium salt may serve as a lithium ion supply source within
the battery, and facilitate a movement of lithium ions between the positive electrode
and a negative electrode. Examples of the lithium salt usable in the present invention
include one kind or two or more kinds of LiPF
6, LiBF
4, LiSbF
6, LiAsF
6, LiCF
3SO
3, LiN(CF
3SO
2)
3, Li(CF
3SO
2)
2N, LiC
4F
9SO
3, LiClO
4, LiAlO
4, LiAlCl
4, LiN(C
xF
2x+1SO
2)(C
yF
2y+1SO
2) (here, x and y are natural numbers), LiCl, LiI, and lithium bisoxalate borate as
supporting electrolytic salt. A concentration of lithium salt in the electrolyte may
be changed depending on a usage, and generally is in a range of 0.1 M to 2.0 M.
[0054] Further, the organic solvent serves as a medium for making ions involving in an electrochemical
reaction of the battery move, and an example thereof includes one or more of benzene,
toluene, fluorobenzene, 1,2-difluorobenzene, 1,3-difluorobenzene, 1,4-difluorobenzene,
1,2,3-trifluorobenzene, 1,2,4-trifluorobenzene, chlorobenzene, 1,2-dichlorobenzene,
1,3-dichlorobenzene, 1,4-dichlorobenzene, 1,2,3-trichlorobenzene, 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene,
iodobenzene, 1,2-diiodobenzene, 1,3-diiodobenzene, 1,4-diiodobenzene, 1,2,3-triiodobenzene,
1,2,4-triiodobenzene, fluorotoluene, 1,2-difluorotoluene, 1,3-difluorotoluene, 1,4-difluorotoluene,
1,2,3-trifluorotoluene, 1,2,4-trifluorotoluene, chlorotoluene, 1,2-dichlorotoluene,
1,3-dichlorotoluene, 1,4-dichlorotoluene, 1,2,3-trichlorotoluene, 1,2,4-trichlorotoluene,
iodotoluene, 1,2-diiodotoluene, 1,3-diiodotoluene, 1,4-diiodotoluene, 1,2,3-triiodotoluene,
1,2,4-triiodotoluene, R-CN (here, R is a hydrocarbon group having a linear, branched,
or ring structure with 2 to 50 carbon atoms, and the hydrocarbon group may include
double bonding, aromatic ring, or ether bonding), dimethylformamide, dimethylacetate,
xylene, cyclohexane, tetrahydrofuran, 2-methyltetrahydrofuran, cyclohexanone, ethanol,
isopropyl alcohol, dimethyl carbonate, ethyl methyl carbonate, diethyl carbonate,
methyl propyl carbonate, propylene carbonate, methyl propionate, ethyl propionate,
methyl acetate, ethyl acetate, propyl acetate, dimethoxyethane, 1,3-dioxolane, diglyme,
tetraglyme, ethylene carbonate, propylene carbonate, γ-butyrolactone, sulfolane, valerolactone,
decanolide, and mevalerolactone, but is not limited thereto.
[0055] The secondary battery of the present invention may further include a typical element,
such as a separator, a can, a battery case, or a gasket, in addition to the aforementioned
elements, and a particular kind of the element is not particularly limited. Further,
the secondary battery of the present invention may include the aforementioned elements
and be manufactured by a method and in a shape general in the art. An example of the
shape of the secondary battery of the present invention includes a cylindrical shape,
a horn shape, a coin shape, or a pouch shape, but the shape thereof is not limited
thereto.
[Example 1]
[0056] The present invention will be described in more detail through the Examples.
[0057] In the present Example, Si has a range of 60 to 70% based on at%, and Ti and Fe have
a range of 9 to 14% based on at%. In the meantime, the Al has a range of 5 to 19%.
Most preferably, the Al has the range of 10 to 19%.
[0058] Table 1 below is a table representing a composition range of the Examples of the
present invention and the Comparative Examples. In the meantime, Table 2 below relates
to an evaluation of a negative active material based on the compositions of Table
1, and particularly, represents a 1CY-charge/discharge quantity, 1CY-efficiency, a
1CY-electrdoe plate capacity, a 50CY-discharge capacity, 50CY-efficiency, a 50CY-capacity
maintenance rate, a 50CY-expansion rate, and an amorphization degree (%) of the Examples
and the Comparative Examples. A technical meaning for each item of Table 2 will be
described in detail below.
[Table 1]
| Classification |
Si(at%) |
Ti(at%) |
Fe(at%) |
Al(at%) |
Si/Ti(Fe) |
| Comparative Example 1 |
70 |
15 |
15 |
0 |
4.66 |
| Comparative Example 2 |
70 |
14.5 |
14.5 |
1 |
4.82 |
| Comparative Example 3 |
60 |
10 |
10 |
20 |
6 |
| Example 1 |
70 |
12.5 |
12.5 |
5 |
5.6 |
| Example 2 |
70 |
11.5 |
11.5 |
7 |
6.08 |
| Example 3 |
70 |
10 |
10 |
10 |
7 |
| Example 4 |
68 |
9 |
9 |
14 |
7.5 |
| Example 5 |
65 |
10 |
10 |
15 |
6.5 |
| Example 6 |
70 |
10.5 |
10.5 |
9 |
6.66 |
| Example 7 |
67 |
10 |
10 |
13 |
6.7 |
| Example 8 |
66 |
9.93 |
9.93 |
14.14 |
6.64 |
| Comparative Example 4 |
70 |
7.5 |
7.5 |
15 |
9.3 |
| Comparative Example 5 |
70 |
6.5 |
6.5 |
17 |
10.76 |
[0059] In the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the items were measured by
repeating charge/discharge 50 times. The charge/discharge method was performed based
on a charge/discharge method for an active material for a lithium secondary battery
which is generally and publicly known in the art.
[0060] First, in Examples 1 to 8 of the present invention, Al is composed within a range
of 5 to 19% based on at%, and Comparative Example 1 represents a case where Al is
not added, and Comparative Example 2 represents the case where Al is added by 1%,
and Comparative Example 3 represents the case where Al is added by 20%.
[0061] In the meantime, Comparative Example 4 represents the case where Al is added by 15%
and Ti (Fe) is added by 7.5%, and Comparative Example 5 represents the case where
Al is added by 17% and Ti (Fe) is added by 6.5%.
[0062] In the meantime, Ti and Fe are bonded to Si to form Si
2TiFe that is an intermetallic compound. Accordingly, when the contents of Ti and Fe
are large, Si is consumed for forming the intermetallic compound, so that a capacity
of Si per g of an active material is decreased, and in this case, in order to obtain
Si with a capacity of 1,000 mAh/g or more, the content of Si inserted needs to be
considerably increased. In general, when a large amount of Si that is a semimetal
is contained, viscosity of a molten metal is high during melting, and thus rapid solidification
workability becomes poor, so that the content of Si is preferably maintained within
a range of 70%. Accordingly, the contents of Ti and Fe do not exceed 14% considering
the forming of the intermetallic compound with Si.
[0063] In the Examples of the present invention, it was derived that the contents of Ti
or Fe have a range of 9% to 14% during a process of drawing an optimum alloy component
in relation to an expansion rate.
[0064] Referring to Tables 1 and 2, in the Examples of the present invention, it was derived
that it is required that a ratio of Ti to Fe in the negative active material for the
secondary battery has 1:1 and a ratio of Si : Ti or Si : Fe in the negative active
material for the secondary battery has a range of 5:1 to 9:1.
[0065] Further, not according to the invention, Al may have a range larger than 1% and less
than 20% based on at%. When about 1% of Al is included, expansion of the active material
is severely incurred after 50 cycles, and in this case, the active material is dispersed,
so that about 1% of Al is not preferable. Further, not according to the invention,
when 20% of Al is included, a discharge capacity is sharply decreased by a change
in a volume fraction of Si : matrix, so that 20% of Al is not preferable. In the Examples
of the present invention, it was derived that when Al has a range of 5 to 19% based
on at%, according to the claims, the range of the most preferable expansion rate is
obtained, and it could be seen that a discharge capacity is not decreased within the
range of 5 to 19%. Most preferably, Al is 10 to 19%, and it is possible to obtain
the range of a most preferable 50 cycle expansion rate, and further a discharge capacity
is not decreased.
[0066] Referring to Table 2 below, in Examples 1 to 8 of the present invention, it can be
seen that performance of the active material is improved according to the addition
of Al. Particularly, it can be seen that when Al is added, a discharge capacity, reversible
efficiency, and an expansion characteristic are remarkably improved. By contract,
in Comparative Example 1, in which Al is not added, a 50 cycle expansion characteristic
has a value exceeding 200%. Further, in Comparative Example 2 in which 1% of Al is
added, a 50 cycle expansion characteristic exceeds 200% similar to Comparative Example
1. By contrast, in Comparative Example 3 in which 20% of Al is added, a 50 cycle expansion
characteristic exceeds is 40.2%, which is very low, but in this case, a discharge
capacity is remarkably decreased, so that there is a problem in that an effect of
performance improvement of the negative active material of a secondary battery is
rather decreased.
[0067] In the meantime, a ratio of Si/Ti(Fe) in Comparative Example 4 having a composition
of 15% Al and 7.5%Ti(Fe) has 9.3, and a ratio of Si/Ti(Fe) in Comparative Example
5 having a composition of 17% Al and 6.5%Ti(Fe) has 10.76. Therefore, a 50 cycle expansion
characteristic is very low when a composition of Ti(Fe) is less than 9% and a ratio
of Si/Ti(Fe) exceeds 9.
[0068] Accordingly, in the Examples of the present invention, referring to Tables 1 and
2, it can be seen that a discharge capacity, reversible efficiency, and an expansion
characteristic of the negative active material are remarkably improved according to
the addition of Al.
[0069] Further, it can be seen that when the content of Al has a range of 5 to 19% based
on at%, optimum performance is exhibited. Further, it can be seen that in Comparative
Examples 1 and 2, an amorphization degree (%) is less than 25%, and a ratio of Si/Ti(Fe)
is also less than 5. Thus, it can be seen that in the Examples of the present invention,
a required ratio of Si : Ti or Si : Fe in the negative active material for the secondary
battery has a range of 5:1 to 9:1.
[0070] FIGS. 1A, 1B, and 1C and FIG. 2 are tissue pictures showing an expansion rate characteristic
after 50 cycles for Comparative Example 2 and Example 5, respectively. In FIGS. 1A,
1B, and 1C, it can be seen that a part forming a bright particle shape is a matrix,
and a dark background part is Si, and the matrixes are well collected at an initial
stage before a lifespan test similar to FIG. 1C, but bright particles forming the
matrix are dispersed while charge/discharge for 50 cycles is repeated and a volume
of an Si part is increased. As illustrated in FIG. 1C, even after 50 cycles, the matrixes
are not dispersed from each other and are collected well regardless of contraction
and expansion of silicon. A phenomenon, in which the active material matrixes are
dispersed, cause a rapid increase in an expansion numerical value after 50 cycles.
When 1% or less of Al is added similar to Comparative Examples 1 and 2, an expansion
rate after 50 cycles is 200% or more, which is very high, by contrast, in Example
5, in which the dispersion of the active material is not observed, it can be seen
that an expansion rate after 50 cycles is about 78%, which is very excellent, and
a lifespan characteristic is also very excellent.
[Table 2]
| Classification |
1CY-charge |
1CY-discharge |
1CY-efficiency |
1CY-Electrode plate |
50CY-discharge |
50CY-efficiency |
50CY-maintenance |
50CY-expansion |
Amorphization degree (%) |
| Comparative Example 1 |
1134. 0 |
924.2 |
81.5% |
800.4 |
871.2 |
98.4% |
101.6% |
210.0% |
24.5 |
| Comparative Example 2 |
1277. 2 |
1072.3 |
83.9% |
928.6 |
1012.1 |
98.8% |
96.1% |
208.3% |
24.7 |
| Comparative Example 3 |
614.2 |
432.8 |
70.3% |
374.8 |
597.7 |
100.5 % |
164.1% |
40.2% |
46.5 |
| Example 1 |
1299.9 |
1085.2 |
83.5% |
939.8 |
948.7 |
99.1% |
91.8% |
147.9% |
29.2 |
| Example 2 |
1405.6 |
1212.5 |
86.3% |
1050.0 |
1125.1 |
99.5% |
97.1% |
96.2% |
41.1 |
| Example 3 |
1336.5 |
1133.2 |
84.7% |
981.3 |
1038.7 |
99.3% |
97.2% |
120.0% |
45.5 |
| Example 4 |
1752.3 |
1535.8 |
87.6% |
1330.0 |
1216.5 |
99.3% |
88.7% |
93.8% |
35.1 |
| Example 5 |
1189.4 |
988.0 |
83.0% |
855.6 |
977.2 |
100.5% |
113.2% |
78.1% |
45.3 |
| Example 6 |
1608.8 |
1375.2 |
85.5% |
|
1245.8 |
99.4% |
98.8% |
110% |
43.1 |
| Example 7 |
1278 |
1062 |
83% |
|
1037 |
99.5% |
97.6% |
82.8% |
47.7 |
| Example 8 |
1465 |
1243 |
84.8% |
|
1069 |
99.6% |
86.1% |
76.5% |
46.4 |
| Comparative Example 4 |
1822.7 |
1582.6 |
86.8% |
|
1311 |
98.9% |
82.9% |
180% |
35.9 |
| Comparative Example 5 |
1892.3 |
1635.1 |
86.4% |
|
1236 |
99.1% |
75.6% |
183% |
37.7 |
[0071] First, the active material in the Example of the present invention was evaluated
by manufacturing an electrode plate having a composition below.
[0072] A silicon alloy active material was evaluated by manufacturing an electrode plate
having a composition in which a ratio of a conductive addictive (based on a carbon
black) and a binder (based on an organic material, a PAI binder) is 86.6% : 3.4% :
10%, and slurry dispersed in an NMP solvent was prepared, the slurry was coated on
a copper foiled current collector by a doctor blade method, followed by drying in
a microwave oven at 110°C and heat treating for one hour at an Ar atmosphere and 210°C,
to cure a binder.
[0073] The electrode plate manufactured by the aforementioned method was assembled to a
coin cell by using a lithium metal as a counter electrode and was subject to the formation
process under the condition below.
Charge (lithium insertion) : 0.1C, 0.005V, 0.05C cut-off
Discharge (lithium discharge) : 0.1C, 1.5V cut-off
[0074] After the formation process, a cycle test was performed under the condition below.
Charge : 0.5C, 0.01V, 0.05C cut-off
Discharge : 0.5C, 1.0V cut-off
[0075] In Table 2, 1CY-charge (mAh/g) is a formation charge capacity per 1g of an active
material, and is a value obtained by measuring a charge quantity at a charge stage
in the formation process that is the first charge stage after assembling the coin
cell and dividing the measured charge quantity by weight of the active material included
in the coin cell electrode plate.
[0076] 1CY-discharge (mAh/g) is a formation discharge capacity per 1g of the active material,
and is a value obtained by measuring a charge quantity at a discharge stage in the
formation process that is the first charging stage after assembling the coin cell
and dividing the measured charge quantity by weight of the active material included
in the coin cell electrode plate. In the present Example, a capacity per g means a
0.1C deformation discharge capacity that is the discharge capacity measured in this
case.
[0077] 1CY-efficiency is a value, expressed by a percentage, obtained by dividing a discharge
capacity in the formation process that is the first charge/discharge process by a
charge capacity.
[0078] In general, graphite has high initial efficiency of 94%, a silicon alloy has initial
efficiency of 80 to 90%, and a silicon oxide (SiOx) has initial efficiency of a maximum
of 70%.
[0079] Any kind of material has initial efficiency of less than 100% because lithium initially
injected while charging during the formation process is irreversibly trapped or consumed
by a side reaction, such as formation of an SEI, and when initial efficiency is low,
there is a loss in that a negative active material and a positive active material
need to be additionally injected, so that it is important to improve initial efficiency
when designing a battery.
[0080] The silicon alloy used in the Example of the present invention has an initial efficiency
value of 85%, and the conductive addictive or the binder initially and irreversibly
consumes lithium, so that an initial efficiency value of the active material itself
is substantially about 90%.
[0081] 50CY-discharge is a discharge capacity per g of the active material for 50 cycles,
and is a value obtained by dividing a charge quantity measured during the discharge
at the 50
th cycle including the formation process during the cycle test progressed with 0.5C
after the formation process by weight of the active material. When the active material
deteriorates during the progress of the cycle test, 50CY-discharge is represented
by a numerical value smaller than an initial discharge capacity, and when the active
material hardly deteriorates during the progress of the cycle test, 50CY-discharge
is represented by a numerical value similar to an initial discharge capacity.
[0082] 50CY-efficiency is a ratio, expressed by a percentage, of a discharge quantity to
a charge quantity at the 50 cycle. High 50CY-efficiency means that a loss of lithium
by a side reaction and other deterioration at a corresponding cycle is small. In general,
when the 50CY-efficiency is 99.5% or more, the value is determined as a very excellent
value, and distribution in the assembling of the coin cell cannot be ignorable according
to an environment of an experiment room, so that even when the 50CY-efficiency is
98% or more, the value is determined as an excellent value.
[0083] 50CY-maintenance is a ratio, which is expressed by a percentage, of a discharge capacity
at the 50
th cycle based on a discharge capacity at the first cycle when a next 0.5C cycle is
performed except for the cycle performed during the formation process.
[0084] When the 50CY-maintenance rate is large, it is considered that an inclination of
a battery lifespan close to a horizontal line, and when the 50CY-maintenance rate
is 90% or less, it means that deterioration is incurred during the progress of the
cycle and a discharge capacity is decreased. In some Examples, there are even the
cases where the 50CY-mainteancne ratio exceeds 100%, and this is determined as deterioration
is hardly incurred for a lifespan, and activated silicon particles are additionally
present.
[0085] 50CY-expansion is a thickness increased value, which is expressed by a percentage,
after 50 cycles compared to an initial electrode plate thickness. A method of measuring
the 50CY-expansion will be described in detail below.
[0086] First, an initial thickness of a current collector is measured.
[0087] Then, a thickness of only the active material is calculated by measuring a thickness
of an electrode plate, which is cut in a circular shape so as to be assembled with
the coin cell, by using a micro meter, and then subtracting the thickness of the current
collector from the measured thickness of the electrode plate.
[0088] Next, after a 50 cycle test is completed, the coil cell is removed from a dry room,
only a negative electrode plate is separated, an electrolyte left on the electrode
plate is washed by using a DEC solution and dried, a thickness of the electrode plate
is measured by using a micro meter, and a thickness of the current collector is subtracted
from the measured thickness of the electrode plate to calculate a thickness of only
the active material after the cycle. That is, a value, which is expressed by a percentage,
obtained by dividing an increased thickness of the active material after 50 cycles
compared to an initial thickness of the active material by the initial thickness of
the active material is 50CY-expansion.
[0089] It is to be appreciated that embodiments described above are intended to be illustrative
in every sense, and not restrictive. The scope of the present invention is represented
by the claims to be described below rather than the detailed description.