Achieving the coexistence of high energy density and fast-charging capability remains a fundamental challenge for lithium-ion batteries. Increasing electrode thickness and compaction density enhances energy density but simultaneously alters the pore structure and restricts lithium-ion transport, leading to concentration polarization, increased resistance, and lithium plating. In this work, we employ X-ray computed tomography (X-CT) and 3D reconstruction to establish quantitative relationships between particle size, compaction density, and key structural parameters (porosity, tortuosity, effective proportion of lithium-ion flux (feff)). Then, an electrochemical model is used to link the liquid-phase kinetic parameters (ionic conductivity (k0) and liquid-phase diffusion coefficient), as corrected by the effective proportion of lithium-ion flux feff, to polarization and lithium-plating behavior, and the maximum current density without lithium plating under various fabrication conditions is finally determined. Results show that small-particle electrodes exhibit superior rate capability at moderate compaction levels, but suffer from rapidly increasing tortuosity and reduced transport efficiency under high compaction and large thickness. Moreover, a double-layer gradient electrode design effectively integrates the advantages of both large- and small-particle architectures, enabling high-rate operation without lithium plating. The double-layer gradient electrode (ρ = 1.6 g/cm3) exhibited ~50% higher performance at 1.5 C compared to the small-particle anode and enabled 2 C charging without lithium plating. This study offers a robust structural design strategy for optimizing thick-electrode architectures toward high-energy, fast-charging LIBs.
Li et al. (Sun,) studied this question.