16 research outputs found

    Computational modelling of structure and dynamics in lightweight hydrides

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    Hydrogen storage in lightweight hydrides continues to attract significant interest as the lack of a safe and efficient storage of hydrogen remains the major technological barrier to the widespread use of hydrogen as a fuel. The metal borohydrides Ca(BHâ‚„)â‚‚ and LiBHâ‚„ form the subject of this thesis; three aspects of considerable academic interest were investigated by density functional theory (DFT) and molecular dynamics (MD) modelling. (i) High-pressure crystal structures of Ca(BHâ‚„)â‚‚ were predicted from a structural analogy between metal borohydrides and isoelectronic metal oxides. The structural stability of hydrogen storage materials under high pressure is an important aspect, as high-pressure polymorphs may provide structures with better hydrogen desorption properties. The isoelectronic analogue of Ca(BHâ‚„)â‚‚ is TiOâ‚‚, and structural equivalents of Ca(BHâ‚„)â‚‚ in the baddeleyite, columbite and cotunnite structures of TiOâ‚‚ were found to be stable at elevated pressure. Thermodynamic stability was evaluated by computing the Gibbs energy with respect to pressure and temperature. The pressure-dependence of the Helmholtz energy was determined to described a third-order Birch-Murnaghan equation of state, and the harmonic approximation was used to compute the vibrational energy levels and the Helmholtz energy as a function of temperature. The proposed structures are consistent with reports of two hitherto unidentified high-pressure phases observed experimentally. (ii) The disordered structure of the high-temperature phase of LiBH4 was studied by ab initio molecular dynamics (MD) at temperatures ranging from 200-535 K. It was found that the model emerging from analysis of the MD simulations properly accounts for dynamical disorder and fundamentally differs from the published experimental and theoretical structures. The validity of the MD model was corroborated by comparison of calculated pair distribution functions, vibrational spectra and a crystallographic model with neutron diffraction data; good agreement was found. A reassignment of the space group from P63mc to P63/mmc is proposed based on evidence for additional symmetry from MD simulations. (iii) Finally, a new MD-based method was developed to simulate fast ionic diffusion in LiBHâ‚„. The colour diffusion algorithm - a nonequilibrium molecular dynamics method originally developed for the study of model fluids - was adapted and applied to self-diffusion of atoms in a solid for the first time. Calculated diffusion coefficients agreed very well with published measurements, and diffusion pathways that include collective particle effects were determined directly from the simulation results, thereby opening up a promising and efficient new method for the study of phenomena such as superionic conduction

    Diffusion in Li2O studied by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics for 873 < T/K < 1603

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    The use of non-equilibrium molecular dynamics facilitates the calculation of the cation diffusion constant of Li2O at temperatures too low to be accessible by other methods. Excellent agreement with experimental diffusion coefficients has been obtained over the temperature range 873 < T/K < 1603. Diffusion below 1200 K was shown to be dominated by a concerted nearest-neighbour hopping process, whereas in the high-temperature superionic region an additional mechanism involving a six-coordinate interstitial cation site in the anti-fluorite structure becomes increasingly dominant. Our model thus accounts for the transition from the superionic regime to the non-superionic regime

    Diffusion in Liâ‚‚O studied by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics for 873 &lt; T/K &lt; 1603

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    The use of non-equilibrium molecular dynamics facilitates the calculation of the cation diffusion constant of Li2O at temperatures too low to be accessible by other methods. Excellent agreement with experimental diffusion coefficients has been obtained over the temperature range 873 &lt; T/K &lt; 1603. Diffusion below 1200 K was shown to be dominated by a concerted nearest-neighbour hopping process, whereas in the high-temperature superionic region an additional mechanism involving a six-coordinate interstitial cation site in the anti-fluorite structure becomes increasingly dominant. Our model thus accounts for the transition from the superionic regime to the non-superionic regime.</p

    Ab initio nonequilibrium molecular dynamics in the solid superionic conductor LiBH4.

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    The color-diffusion algorithm is applied to ab initio molecular dynamics simulation of hexagonal LiBH(4) to determine the lithium diffusion coefficient and diffusion mechanisms. Even in the best solid lithium ion conductors, the time scale of ion diffusion is too long to be readily accessible by ab initio molecular dynamics at a reasonable computational cost. In our nonequilibrium method, rare events are accelerated by the application of an artificial external field acting on the mobile species; the system response to this perturbation is accurately described in the framework of linear response theory and is directly related to the diffusion coefficient, thus resulting in a controllable approximation. The calculated lithium ionic conductivity of LiBH(4) closely matches published measurements, and the diffusion mechanism can be elucidated directly from the generated trajectory

    Understanding Vibrational Anharmonicity and Phonon Dispersion in Solid Ammonia Borane

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    We compute the hydrogen vibrational spectra for bulk ammonia borane (NH 3BH 3), for both protonated and deuterated cases, using harmonic and anharmonic methodologies as well as low frequency coupling and quantifying dispersive effects to understand their influence on the resulting spectra. Even at 10 K the accounting of anharmonic effects on the incoherent inelastic neutron scattering (IINS) signal is more significant than approximations introduced by sampling and interpolating a finite simulation cell to capture dispersion effects. We compare our computed anharmonic spectrum with IINS measurements and find excellent agreement. © 2012 American Chemical Society

    The structure, thermal properties and phase transformations of the cubic polymorph of magnesium tetrahydroborate

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    The structure of the cubic polymorph of magnesium tetrahydroborate (γ-Mg(BH(4))(2)) has been determined in space group Ia3d from a structural database of the isoelectronic compound SiO(2); this has been corroborated by DFT calculations. The structure is found to concur with that recently determined by Filinchuk et al. (Y. Filinchuk, B. Richter, T. R. Jensen, V. Dmitriev, D. Chernyshov and H. Hagemann, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2011, DOI: 10.1002/anie.201100675). The phase transformations and subsequent decomposition of γ-Mg(BH(4))(2) on heating have been ascertained from variable-temperature synchrotron X-ray diffraction data combined with thermogravimetric and mass spectrometry measurements. At ~160 °C, conversion to a disordered variant of the β-Mg(BH(4))(2) phase (denoted as β') is observed along with a further unidentified polymorph. There is evidence of amorphous phases during decomposition but there is no direct crystallographic indication of the existence of Mg(B(12)H(12)) or other intermediate Mg-B-H compounds. MgH(2) and finally Mg are observed in the X-ray diffraction data after decomposition
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