Issue 10, 2025

Vacancy enhanced Li, Na, and K clustering on graphene

Abstract

The formation of metallic dendrites during battery cycling is a persistent challenge for alkali metal-ion batteries, reducing cycle life and posing safety risks. Although surface defects are often implicated in inhomogeneous metal nucleation, the atomic-scale mechanisms by which they promote metal clustering and subsequent dendrite formation remain poorly understood. Here, we use first-principles calculations to investigate how carbon monovacancies (VC) influence the clustering behaviour of alkali metals (Li, Na, and K) on graphene – a common basal-plane motif in graphite, hard carbons, and graphene-based anodes. Clusters of Li, Na, and K of varying size (Mn for n ∈ {1–12}) are characterised on pristine and defective graphene to understand their stability. On pristine graphene, cluster formation is hindered for Li due to the instability of small clusters (n ≤ 3) and significant Li–Li repulsion, and suppressed for K due to weak K–K binding and its larger ionic radius. In contrast, Na exhibits spontaneous clustering, suggesting a higher propensity for dendrite formation even in the absence of defects. The introduction of a VC dramatically alters these trends: it stabilises small (n ≤ 3) clusters across all three metals by enhancing binding strength with the surface and modifying charge localisation. For Li, the vacancy overcomes the barrier to early-stage nucleation; for Na, it promotes growth at even lower metal loadings; and for K, clustering becomes locally favoured albeit only for the smallest cluster sizes (n ≤ 3). These results clarify the defect-facilitated pathways to metal clustering, offering atomistic insight that can inform the development of more dendrite-resistant carbon architectures.

Graphical abstract: Vacancy enhanced Li, Na, and K clustering on graphene

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Jan 2025
Accepted
16 Apr 2025
First published
16 Apr 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Sustainable Energy Fuels, 2025,9, 2813-2826

Vacancy enhanced Li, Na, and K clustering on graphene

J. Cottom, Q. Cai and E. Olsson, Sustainable Energy Fuels, 2025, 9, 2813 DOI: 10.1039/D5SE00130G

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