Research Progress on the Influence of Cathode Materials on Thermal Runaway Behavior of Lithium-Ion Batteries
Yanru Yang, Yang Gao, Yu Miao, Liang Yuan, Xiaoqiang Ren
Abstract
The structure, chemical composition, thermal stability, and abuse responses of cathode materials are critical to the safety and economy of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). This review systematically summarizes advances in research on how cathode materials influence LIB thermal runaway (TR) behavior. It analyzes the oxygen release from cathodes in TR mechanisms and the hazards of such oxygen generation during TR, expounds on how differences in cathode structure, chemical composition, and thermal stability affect TR behavior, and summarizes the thermal characteristics of LIBs with different cathodes under mechanical, electrical, and thermal abuse. Results indicate that oxygen released from cathode decomposition during TR oxidizes electrolytes, releasing substantial heat and gas and causing more severe TR hazards. Structural instability of cathodes leads to accelerated release of lattice oxygen, speeding up TR initiation. Chemical composition regulates thermal stability, phase transition pathways, and gas generation rates during TR, while elemental ratios affect the ease of TR triggering. Cathodes with poor thermal stability have lower thermal decomposition onset temperatures, making TR more likely to occur and intensifying reaction severity. All three abuse types trigger inherent risks of cathodes, inducing TR and significantly increasing its occurrence probability. Differences in intrinsic properties further extend to the system level, also influencing thermal runaway propagation and fire dynamics at the module level. Future research focusing on the intrinsic properties of cathodes and external abuse is of great significance for addressing LIB TR behavior.