297 research outputs found
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Morphological and Chemical Evolution of Silicon Nanocomposite during Cycling
Engineering three-dimensionally electrodeposited Si-on-Ni inverse opal structure for high volumetric capacity Li-ion microbattery anode.
Aiming at improving the volumetric capacity of nanostructured Li-ion battery anode, an electrodeposited Si-on-Ni inverse opal structure has been proposed in the present work. This type of electrode provides three-dimensional bi-continuous pathways for ion/electron transport and high surface area-to-volume ratios, and thus exhibits lower interfacial resistance, but higher effective Li ions diffusion coefficients, when compared to the Si-on-Ni nanocable array electrode of the same active material mass. As a result, improved volumetric capacities and rate capabilities have been demonstrated in the Si-on-Ni inverse opal anode. We also show that optimization of the volumetric capacities and the rate performance of the inverse opal electrode can be realized by manipulating the pore size of the Ni scaffold and the thickness of the Si deposit
Non-destructive characterization techniques for battery performance and lifecycle assessment
As global energy demands escalate, and the use of non-renewable resources
become untenable, renewable resources and electric vehicles require far better
batteries to stabilize the new energy landscape. To maximize battery
performance and lifetime, understanding and monitoring the fundamental
mechanisms that govern their operation throughout their life cycle is crucial.
Unfortunately, from the moment batteries are sealed until their end-of-life,
they remain a black box, and our current knowledge of a commercial battery s
health status is limited to current (I), voltage (V), temperature (T), and
impedance (R) measurements, at the cell or even module level during use.
Electrochemical models work best when the battery is new, and as state
reckoning drifts leading to an over-reliance on insufficient data to establish
conservative safety margins resulting in the systematic under-utilization of
cells and batteries. While the field of operando characterization is not new,
the emergence of techniques capable of tracking commercial battery properties
under realistic conditions has unlocked a trove of chemical, thermal, and
mechanical data that has the potential to revolutionize the development and
utilization strategies of both new and used lithium-ion devices. In this
review, we examine the latest advances in non-destructive operando
characterization techniques, including electrical sensors, optical fibers,
acoustic transducers, X-ray-based imaging and thermal imaging (IR camera or
calorimetry), and their potential to improve our comprehension of degradation
mechanisms, reduce time and cost, and enhance battery performance throughout
its life cycle
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A review on mechanistic understanding of MnO2 in aqueous electrolyte for electrical energy storage systems
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Elucidating Reversible Electrochemical Redox of Li6PS5CI Solid Electrolyte
Reusable oxidation catalysis using metal-monocatecholato species in a robust metal-organic framework.
An isolated metal-monocatecholato moiety has been achieved in a highly robust metal-organic framework (MOF) by two fundamentally different postsynthetic strategies: postsynthetic deprotection (PSD) and postsynthetic exchange (PSE). Compared with PSD, PSE proved to be a more facile and efficient functionalization approach to access MOFs that could not be directly synthesized under solvothermal conditions. Metalation of the catechol functionality residing in the MOFs resulted in unprecedented Fe-monocatecholato and Cr-monocatecholato species, which were characterized by X-ray absorption spectroscopy, X-band electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, and (57)Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy. The resulting materials are among the first examples of Zr(IV)-based UiO MOFs (UiO = University of Oslo) with coordinatively unsaturated active metal centers. Importantly, the Cr-metalated MOFs are active and efficient catalysts for the oxidation of alcohols to ketones using a wide range of substrates. Catalysis could be achieved with very low metal loadings (0.5-1 mol %). Unlike zeolite-supported, Cr-exchange oxidation catalysts, the MOF-based catalysts reported here are completely recyclable and reusable, which may make them attractive catalysts for 'green' chemistry processes
Conformal Three-Dimensional Interphase of Li Metal Anode Revealed by Low Dose Cryo-Electron Microscopy
Using cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, we revealed three
dimensional (3D) structural details of the electrochemically plated lithium
(Li) flakes and their solid electrolyte interphase (SEI), including the
composite SEI skin-layer and SEI fossil pieces buried inside the Li matrix. As
the SEI skin-layer is largely comprised of nanocrystalline LiF and Li2O in
amorphous polymeric matrix, when complete Li stripping occurs, the compromised
SEI three-dimensional framework buckles, forming nanoscale bends and wrinkles.
We showed that the flexibility and resilience of the SEI skin-layer plays a
vital role in preserving an intact SEI 3D framework after Li stripping. The
intact SEI network enables the nucleation and growth of the newly plated Li
inside the previously formed SEI network in the subsequent cycles, preventing
additional large amount of SEI formation between newly plated Li metal and the
electrolyte. In addition, cells cycled under the accurately controlled uniaxial
pressure can further enhance the repeated utilization of the SEI framework and
improve the coulombic efficiency (CE) by up to 97%, demonstrating an effective
strategy of reducing the formation of additional SEI and inactive dead Li. The
identification of such flexible and porous 3D SEI framework clarifies the
working mechanism of SEI in lithium metal anode for batteries. The insights
provided in this work will inspire researchers to design more functional
artificial 3D SEI on other metal anodes to improve rechargeable metal battery
with long cycle life
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