57 research outputs found

    Tetragonal Li10GeP2S12 and Li7GePS8 - exploring the Li ion dynamics in LGPS Li electrolytes

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    Tetragonal Li10GeP2S12 (LGPS) is the best solid Li electrolyte reported in the literature. In this study we present the first in-depth study on the structure and Li ion dynamics of this structure type. We prepared two different tetragonal LGPS samples, Li10GeP2S12 and the new compound Li7GePS8. The Li ion dynamics and the structure of these materials were characterized using a multitude of complementary techniques, including impedance spectroscopy, Li-7 PFG NMR, Li-7 NMR relaxometry, X-ray diffraction, electron diffraction, and P-31 MAS NMR. The exceptionally high ionic conductivity of tetragonal LGPS of similar to 10(-2) S cm(-1) is traced back to nearly isotropic Li hopping processes in the bulk lattice of LGPS with E-A approximate to 0.22 eV

    Twinning and intergrowth of rare earth boride carbides

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    Rational Strain Engineering in Delafossite Oxides for Highly Efficient Hydrogen Evolution Catalysis in Acidic Media

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    The rational design of hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) electrocatalysts which are competitive with platinum is an outstanding challenge to make power-to-gas technologies economically viable. Here, we introduce the delafossites PdCrO2_2, PdCoO2_2 and PtCoO2_2 as a new family of electrocatalysts for the HER in acidic media. We show that in PdCoO2_2 the inherently strained Pd metal sublattice acts as a pseudomorphic template for the growth of a strained (by +2.3%) Pd rich capping layer under reductive conditions. The surface modification continuously improves the electrocatalytic activity by simultaneously increasing the exchange current density j0_0 from 2 to 5 mA/cmgeo2^2_{geo} and by reducing the Tafel slope down to 38 mV/decade, leading to overpotentials η10\eta_{10} < 15 mV for 10 mA/cmgeo2^2_{geo}, superior to bulk platinum. The greatly improved activity is attributed to the in-situ stabilization of a β\beta-palladium hydride phase with drastically enhanced surface catalytic properties with respect to pure or nanostructured palladium. These findings illustrate how operando induced electrodissolution can be used as a top-down design concept for rational surface and property engineering through the strain-stabilized formation of catalytically active phases

    The Stacking Faulted Nature of the Narrow Gap Semiconductor Sc2_{2}Si2_{2}Te6_{6}

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    Crystals of Sc2_{2}Si2_{2}Te6_{6} have been grown and its crystal, micro- and electronic structures were investigated. The layered character of the title compound exhibits stacking faults that impede a full structural characterization by single crystal X-ray diffraction due to diffuse scattering. Based on high resolution transmission electron micrographs and diffraction patterns, the stacking faulted nature of the real structure of Sc2_{2}Si2_{2}Te6_{6} has been revealed. Different stacking models were derived from the idealized, faultless structure and the stacking disorder was quantitatively analyzed by Rietveld refinement of powder X-ray diffraction patterns. An energetic comparison of the stacking models by density functional theory is in line with the experimental observations. Further, the bonding situation was investigated by electronic structure calculations. Sc2_{2}Si2_{2}Te6_{6} is a narrow gap semiconductor with an indirect band gap of 0.65 eV

    Sub-stoichiometric 2D covalent organic frameworks from tri- and tetratopic linkers

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    Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are typically designed by breaking down the desired network into feasible building blocks - either simple and highly symmetric, or more convoluted and thus less symmetric. The linkers are chosen complementary to each other such that an extended, fully condensed network structure can form. We show not only an exception, but a design principle that allows breaking free of such design rules. We show that tri- and tetratopic linkers can be combined to form imine-linked [4 + 3] sub-stoichiometric 2D COFs featuring an unexpected bex net topology, and with periodic uncondensed amine functionalities which enhance CO2 adsorption, can be derivatized in a subsequent reaction, and can also act as organocatalysts. We further extend this class of nets by including a ditopic linker to form [4 + 3 + 2] COFs. The results open up possibilities towards a new class of sub-valent COFs with unique structural, topological and compositional complexities for diverse applications

    Morphology matters: 0D/2D WO3 nanoparticle-ruthenium oxide nanosheet composites for enhanced photocatalytic oxygen evolution reaction rates

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    In the field of artificial photosynthesis with semiconductor light harvesters, the default cocatalyst morphologies are isotropic, 0D nanoparticles. Herein, the use of highly anisotropic 2D ruthenium oxide nanosheet (RONS) cocatalysts as an approach to enhance photocatalytic oxygen evolution (OER) rates on commercial WO3 nanoparticles (0D light harvester) is presented. At optimal cocatalyst loadings and identical photocatalysis conditions, WO3 impregnated with RONS (RONS/WO3) shows a fivefold increase in normalized photonic efficiency compared to when it is impregnated with conventional ruthenium oxide (rutile) nanoparticles (RONP/WO3). The superior RONS/WO3 performance is attributed to two special properties of the RONS: i) lower electrochemical water oxidation overpotential for RONS featuring highly active edge sites, and ii) decreased parasitic light absorption on RONS. Evidence is presented that OER photocatalytic performance can be doubled with control of RONS edges and it is shown that compared to WO3 impregnated with RONP, the advantageous optical properties and geometry of RONS decrease the fraction of light absorbed by the cocatalyst, thus reducing the parasitic light absorption on the RONS/WO3 composite. Therefore, the results presented in the current study are expected to promote engineering of cocatalyst morphology as a complementary concept to optimize light harvester-cocatalyst composites for enhanced photocatalytic efficiencyA.G. and S.L. contributed equally to this work. Financial support is gratefully acknowledged from the Max Planck Society, the Cluster of Excellence “e-conversion” (EXC 2089/1–390776260), and the Center for Nanoscience. S.L. is thankful to the Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), Government of India, for the award of a Ramanujan Fellowship (RJF/2021/000050). A.J.-S. gratefully acknowledges Spanish Ministry of Universities for funding through a Beatriz Galindo Research fellowship BG20/00015. The authors thank Prof. Gisela Schütz (Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, MPI-IS, Stuttgart) for access to XPS analysis at their facilities. The authors are grateful to Dr. Gunther Richter for helpful discussion of XPS data and the MPI-IS for the XPS infrastructure support. The authors thank Andres RodríguezCamargo for FTIR and PXRD measurements and Marie-Luise Schreiber for extensive ICPOES elemental analysis. Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEA

    Rational design of carbon nitride photocatalysts by identification of cyanamide defects as catalytically relevant sites

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    The heptazine-based polymer melon (also known as graphitic carbon nitride, g-C3N4) is a promising photocatalyst for hydrogen evolution. Nonetheless, attempts to improve its inherently low activity are rarely based on rational approaches because of a lack of fundamental understanding of its mechanistic operation. Here we employ molecular heptazine-based model catalysts to identify the cyanamide moiety as a photocatalytically relevant 'defect'. We exploit this knowledge for the rational design of a carbon nitride polymer populated with cyanamide groups, yielding a material with 12 and 16 times the hydrogen evolution rate and apparent quantum efficiency (400 nm), respectively, compared with the unmodified melon. Computational modelling and material characterization suggest that this moiety improves coordination (and, in turn, charge transfer kinetics) to the platinum co-catalyst and enhances the separation of the photogenerated charge carriers. The demonstrated knowledge transfer for rational catalyst design presented here provides the conceptual framework for engineering high-performance heptazine-based photocatalysts

    Structure and dynamics of the fast lithium ion conductor "li 7La3Zr2O12"

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    The solid lithium-ion electrolyte "Li7La3Zr 2O12" (LLZO) with a garnet-type structure has been prepared in the cubic and tetragonal modification following conventional ceramic syntheses routes. Without aluminium doping tetragonal LLZO was obtained, which shows a two orders of magnitude lower room temperature conductivity than the cubic modification. Small concentrations of Al in the order of 1 wt% were sufficient to stabilize the cubic phase, which is known as a fast lithium-ion conductor. The structure and ion dynamics of Al-doped cubic LLZO were studied by impedance spectroscopy, dc conductivity measurements, 6Li and 7Li NMR, XRD, neutron powder diffraction, and TEM precession electron diffraction. From the results we conclude that aluminium is incorporated in the garnet lattice on the tetrahedral 24d Li site, thus stabilizing the cubic LLZO modification. Simulations based on diffraction data show that even at the low temperature of 4 K the Li ions are blurred over various crystallographic sites. This strong Li ion disorder in cubic Al-stabilized LLZO contributes to the high conductivity observed. The Li jump rates and the activation energy probed by NMR are in very good agreement with the transport parameters obtained from electrical conductivity measurements. The activation energy Ea characterizing long-range ion transport in the Al-stabilized cubic LLZO amounts to 0.34 eV. Total electric conductivities determined by ac impedance and a four point dc technique also agree very well and range from 1 × 10-4 Scm-1 to 4 × 10-4 Scm-1 depending on the Al content of the samples. The room temperature conductivity of Al-free tetragonal LLZO is about two orders of magnitude lower (2 × 10 -6 Scm-1, Ea = 0.49 eV activation energy). The electronic partial conductivity of cubic LLZO was measured using the Hebb-Wagner polarization technique. The electronic transference number te- is of the order of 10-7. Thus, cubic LLZO is an almost exclusive lithium ion conductor at ambient temperature. © the Owner Societies 2011
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