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1.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 669: 699-711, 2024 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38735252

RESUMO

Lithium-ion batteries (LiBs) with graphite as an anode and lithiated transition metal oxide as a cathode are approaching their specific energy and power theoretical values. To overcome the limitations of LiBs, lithium metal anode with high specific capacity and low negative redox potential is necessary. However, practical application in rechargeable cells is hindered by uncontrolled lithium deposition manifesting, for instance, as Li dendrite growth which can cause formation of dead Li, short circuits and cell failure. The electrochemical behaviour of a protic additive (NH4PF6) in a carbonate-based electrolyte has been investigated by operando confocal Raman spectroscopy, in situ optical microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, elucidating its functional mechanism. The ammonium cation promotes a chemical modification of the lithium metal anode-electrolyte interphase by producing an N-rich solid electrolyte interphase and chemically modifying the lithium surface morphology by electrochemical pitting. This novel method results in stable lithium deposition and stripping by a decreasing the local current density on the electrode, thus limiting dendritic deposition.

2.
ACS Mater Lett ; 5(9): 2431-2444, 2023 Sep 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37680543

RESUMO

Electrode/electrolyte interfaces are the most important and least understood components of Li-ion and next-generation batteries. An improved understanding of interphases in batteries will undoubtedly lead to breakthroughs in the field. Traditionally, evaluating those interphases involves using ex situ surface sensitive and/or imaging techniques. Due to their very dynamic and reactive nature, ex situ sample manipulation is undesirable. From this point of view, operando surface sensitive techniques represent a major opportunity to push boundaries in battery development. While numerous bulk spectroscopic, scattering, and imaging techniques are well established and widely used, surface sensitive operando techniques remain challenging and, to a larger extent, restricted to the model systems. Here, we give a perspective on techniques with the potential to characterize solid/liquid interfaces in both model and realistic battery configurations. The focus is on techniques that provide chemical and structural information at length and time scales relevant for the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation and evolution, while also probing representative electrode areas. We highlight the following techniques: vibrational spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), neutron and X-ray reflectometry, and grazing incidence scattering techniques. Comprehensive overviews, as well as promises and challenges, of these techniques when used operando on battery interphases are discussed in detail.

3.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 10(6): e2204672, 2023 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36575151

RESUMO

Honeycomb-layered oxides with monovalent or divalent, monolayered cationic lattices generally exhibit myriad crystalline features encompassing rich electrochemistry, geometries, and disorders, which particularly places them as attractive material candidates for next-generation energy storage applications. Herein, global honeycomb-layered oxide compositions, Ag2 M2 TeO6 ( M = Ni , Mg , etc $M = \rm Ni, Mg, etc$ .) exhibiting Ag $\rm Ag$ atom bilayers with sub-valent states within Ag-rich crystalline domains of Ag6 M2 TeO6 and Ag $\rm Ag$ -deficient domains of Ag 2 - x Ni 2 TeO 6 ${\rm Ag}_{2 - x}\rm Ni_2TeO_6$ ( 0 < x < 2 $0 < x < 2$ ). The Ag $\rm Ag$ -rich material characterized by aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy reveals local atomic structural disorders characterized by aperiodic stacking and incoherency in the bilayer arrangement of Ag $\rm Ag$ atoms. Meanwhile, the global material not only displays high ionic conductivity but also manifests oxygen-hole electrochemistry during silver-ion extraction. Within the Ag $\rm Ag$ -rich domains, the bilayered structure, argentophilic interactions therein and the expected Ag $\rm Ag$ sub-valent states ( 1 / 2 + , 2 / 3 + $1/2+, 2/3+$ , etc.) are theoretically understood via spontaneous symmetry breaking of SU(2)× U(1) gauge symmetry interactions amongst 3 degenerate mass-less chiral fermion states, justified by electron occupancy of silver 4 d z 2 $4d_{z^2}$ and 5s orbitals on a bifurcated honeycomb lattice. This implies that bilayered frameworks have research applications that go beyond the confines of energy storage.

4.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 4660, 2021 Aug 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34341351

RESUMO

Honeycomb layered oxides constitute an emerging class of materials that show interesting physicochemical and electrochemical properties. However, the development of these materials is still limited. Here, we report the combined use of alkali atoms (Na and K) to produce a mixed-alkali honeycomb layered oxide material, namely, NaKNi2TeO6. Via transmission electron microscopy measurements, we reveal the local atomic structural disorders characterised by aperiodic stacking and incoherency in the alternating arrangement of Na and K atoms. We also investigate the possibility of mixed electrochemical transport and storage of Na+ and K+ ions in NaKNi2TeO6. In particular, we report an average discharge cell voltage of about 4 V and a specific capacity of around 80 mAh g-1 at low specific currents (i.e., < 10 mA g-1) when a NaKNi2TeO6-based positive electrode is combined with a room-temperature NaK liquid alloy negative electrode using an ionic liquid-based electrolyte solution. These results represent a step towards the use of tailored cathode active materials for "dendrite-free" electrochemical energy storage systems exploiting room-temperature liquid alkali metal alloy materials.

5.
Chem Soc Rev ; 50(6): 3990-4030, 2021 Mar 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33576756

RESUMO

The advent of nanotechnology has hurtled the discovery and development of nanostructured materials with stellar chemical and physical functionalities in a bid to address issues in energy, environment, telecommunications and healthcare. In this quest, a class of two-dimensional layered materials consisting of alkali or coinage metal atoms sandwiched between slabs exclusively made of transition metal and chalcogen (or pnictogen) atoms arranged in a honeycomb fashion have emerged as materials exhibiting fascinatingly rich crystal chemistry, high-voltage electrochemistry, fast cation diffusion besides playing host to varied exotic electromagnetic and topological phenomena. Currently, with a niche application in energy storage as high-voltage materials, this class of honeycomb layered oxides serves as ideal pedagogical exemplars of the innumerable capabilities of nanomaterials drawing immense interest in multiple fields ranging from materials science, solid-state chemistry, electrochemistry and condensed matter physics. In this review, we delineate the relevant chemistry and physics of honeycomb layered oxides, and discuss their functionalities for tunable electrochemistry, superfast ionic conduction, electromagnetism and topology. Moreover, we elucidate the unexplored albeit vastly promising crystal chemistry space whilst outlining effective ways to identify regions within this compositional space, particularly where interesting electromagnetic and topological properties could be lurking within the aforementioned alkali and coinage-metal honeycomb layered oxide structures. We conclude by pointing towards possible future research directions, particularly the prospective realisation of Kitaev-Heisenberg-Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions with single crystals and Floquet theory in closely-related honeycomb layered oxide materials.

6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 56(65): 9272-9275, 2020 Aug 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32657292

RESUMO

Honeycomb layered oxides from Na2Ni2-xCoxTeO6 family were assessed for use as positive electrodes in rechargeable sodium batteries at ambient and elevated temperatures using ionic liquids. Substitution of nickel with cobalt increases the discharge voltage to nearly 4 V (versus Na+/Na), surpassing the average voltages of most Na based layered oxide positive electrodes.

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