Scaling of interfacial currents with particle shape #1769
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hello everyone, What i wonder: I tried some simulations with the user-supplied particle shape. Normally when you supply a very low current to your cell you get almost the theorethical capacity out of your cell, but this is not the case here. For a setup with an electrode capacity of 6mAh/cm² (positive electrode thickness ~100 µm) i almost loose 2 mAh/cm² at C/10 when using a user-supplied particle shape instead of the standard 3 e_s / R. I think this is due to incorrectly scaling the molar flux in the microscale. Normally (and for this i refer to the supporting_information.pdf of this paper) when you use a user-supplied surface area you only set the surface area of the macroscale to this specific value. To ensure charge conservation the molar flux in the boundary needs to be scaled withe the factor of user-supplied-particle shape divided by 3*eps_s/R (see equation S22 in the attached supporting information). Nonetheless i don't know how to fix this in the code. I only have an idea so far which i will show for the positive electrode (same for negative electrode):
There may be a better name than So what do you think about it? |
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Replies: 2 comments 3 replies
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I think this sounds sensible. |
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See #2254 |
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See #2254