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Reproducible emission from nonlinear random lasers

Optics Communications

Andreasen, Jonathan; Robertson, Wesley D.; Brown, Roger; Shank, Josh; Kaehr, Bryan; Henry, David; Smith, Sean; Spoerke, Eric; Scrymgeour, David A.

Multiple scattering of light serves as a mechanism for feedback in random lasers. Consequently, internal spatial mode patterns, lasing wavelengths, and output directionality can all be random. Strong mode interaction can occur in such devices due to spatially overlapping modes resulting in nonlinearity with respect to the pump input power. Nevertheless, temporal coherence and lasing mode amplitude can be fixed at a constant pumping rate. This is a property desirable for applications where unique randomness is exploited but expected to be reliable over time, such as physical unclonable functions. Random lasers can also be cheaply and easily fabricated, exhibit relatively low lasing thresholds and high emission intensity. However, the precise scattering properties of such structures and fluctuations in the pump field can make device emission irreproducible, thereby limiting random laser applications. Here we directly compare the random lasing spectra from zinc oxide samples fabricated in four distinct ways: spin-coating, sputtering, solgel deposition, and atomic layer deposition. The particular method of fabrication has a strong impact. Samples made through atomic layer deposition here exhibit both reproducibility and strong nonlinearity desirable for applications. Randomness in emission spectra persists across hundreds of repeated and averaged measurements irrespective of spatial location and is demonstrably nonlinear with respect to input signal intensity.

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QM Investigation of Rare Earth Ion Interactions with First Hydration Shell Waters and Protein-Based Coordination Models

Journal of Physical Chemistry B

Rempe, Susan B.; Wait, Elizabeth E.; Riley, Christopher R.; Manginell, Monica M.; Peretti, Amanda; Spoerke, Eric; Bachand, George D.; Ren, Pengyu

Conventional methods for extracting rare earth metals (REMs) from mined mineral ores are inefficient, expensive, and environmentally damaging. Recent discovery of lanmodulin (LanM), a protein that coordinates REMs with high-affinity and selectivity over competing ions, provides inspiration for new REM refinement methods. Here, we used quantum mechanical (QM) methods to investigate trivalent lanthanide cation (Ln3+) interactions with coordination systems representing bulk solvent water and protein binding sites. Energy decomposition analysis (EDA) showed differences in the energetic components of Ln3+ interaction with representatives of solvent (water, H2O) and protein binding sites (acetate, CH3COO-), highlighting the importance of accurate description of electrostatics and polarization in computational modeling of REM interactions with biological and bioinspired molecules. Relative binding free energies were obtained for Ln3+ with coordination complexes originating from binding sites in PDB structures of a lanthanum binding peptide (PDB entry 7CCO) and LanM, with explicit consideration of the first hydration shell waters, according to quasi-chemical theory (QCT). Beyond the first shell, the bulk solvent environment was represented with an implicit continuum model. Ln3+ interactions with (H2O)9 and both binding site models became more favorable, moving down the periodic series. This trend was more pronounced with the protein binding site models than with water, resulting in affinity increasing with periodic number, except for the last REM, Lu3+, which bound less favorably than the preceding element, Yb3+. Using the truncated 7CCO binding site model, the magnitude and trend of the experimental Ln3+ relative binding free energies for the whole 7CCO peptide were reproduced. Conversely, the previously reported experimental data for LanM show a preference for the earlier lanthanides; this is likely due to longer-range interactions and cooperative effects, which are not represented by the reduced models. Using the truncated 7CCO binding site model, the magnitude and trend of the experimental Ln3+ relative binding free energies for the whole 7CCO peptide were reproduced. In contrast to the previously reported experimental data for LanM, the peptide preferentially binds the earlier lanthanides. This difference likely arises due to longer-range interactions and cooperative effects not represented by the peptide. Further investigation of Ln3+ interactions with whole proteins using polarizable molecular mechanics models with explicit solvent is warranted to understand the influence of longer-ranged interactions, cooperativity, and bulk solvent. Nevertheless, the present work provides new insights into Ln3+ interactions with biomolecules and presents an effective computational platform for designing specific single-site REM binding peptides more efficiently.

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Machinable, high-conductivity NaSICON through mitigation of humidity effects during solid-state synthesis

Journal of the American Ceramic Society

Peretti, Amanda; Spoerke, Eric; Urena, Michael E.; Salinas, Perla A.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Mantos, Philip S.; Williard, John N.; Small, Leo J.

The Na+ super ion conductor (NaSICON, Na1+xZr2SixP3-xO12) is a solid electrolyte well-known for fast, selective Na+ transport at low temperatures, uniquely enabling sodium-based batteries. Producing high-quality NaSICON from solid-state methods, especially when cost-effective, potentially hygroscopic precursors are used, is not trivial. To understand and eliminate the influence of humidity during processing, a scheme was developed to reproducibly yield a high Na+ conductivity (3.75 mS/cm at 25°C, 81.7 mS/cm at 150°C), high density (97%), and machinable NaSICON without the use of binders, sintering aids, or dopants. Controlled humidity studies over 20%–50% RH coupled with thermal, structural, and electrical analysis reveal that calcination temperatures < 1000°C leave NaSICON processing susceptible to water absorption at > 20% RH due to the presence of hygroscopic Na3PO4 and Na2CO3 during shaping, pressing, and sintering. Water absorption results in NaSICON with lower densities, machinability, and Na+ conductivity, due to impaired intergranular Na+ transport. At the other extreme, fully converting precursor to the NaSICON phase at 1230°C before pressing and sintering leads to poor conductivity and density. By calcining at 1000°C, excellent quality NaSICON may be produced under a range of laboratory environments, enabling low-cost production of high-conductivity, machinable NaSICON necessary the ever-growing energy storage market.

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Nanoconfinement of Carbon Dioxide within Interfacial Aqueous/Ionic Liquid Systems

Langmuir

Leverant, Calen J.; Richards, Danielle; Spoerke, Eric; Alcala, Ryan; Percival, Stephen J.; Vanegas, Juan M.; Rempe, Susan B.

Nanoporous, gas-selective membranes have shown encouraging results for the removal of CO2 from flue gas, yet the optimal design for such membranes is often unknown. Therefore, we used molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate the behavior of CO2 within aqueous and ionic liquid (IL) systems ([EMIM][TFSI] and [OMIM][TFSI]), both confined individually and as an interfacial aqueous/IL system. We found that within aqueous systems the mobility of CO2 is reduced due to interactions between the CO2 oxygens and hydroxyl groups on the pore surface. Within the IL systems, we found that confinement has a greater effect on the [EMIM][TFSI] system as opposed to the [OMIM][TFSI] system. Paradoxically, the larger and more asymmetrical [OMIM]+ molecule undergoes less efficient packing, resulting in fewer confinement effects. Free energy surfaces of the nanoconfined aqueous/IL interface demonstrate that CO2 will transfer spontaneously from the aqueous to the IL phase.

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Shorting at Long Duration: Impact of Extended Discharge Capacity on Battery Solid Electrolytes

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Hill, Ryan C.; Peretti, Amanda; Small, Leo J.; Spoerke, Eric; Cheng, Yang T.

Long-duration energy storage (LDES) is critical to a stable, resilient, and decarbonized electric grid. While batteries are emerging as important LDES devices, extended, high-power discharges necessary for cost-competitive LDES present new materials challenges. Focusing on a new generation of low-temperature molten sodium batteries, we explore here unique phenomena related to long-duration discharge through a well-known solid electrolyte, NaSICON. Specifically, molten sodium symmetric cells at 110 °C were cycled at 0.1 A cm−2 for 1-23 h discharges. Longer discharges led to unstable overpotentials, reduced resistances, and decreased electrolyte strength, caused by massive sodium penetration not observed in shorter duration discharges. Scanning electron microscopy informed mechanisms of sodium penetration and even “healing” during shorter-duration cycling. Importantly, these findings show that traditional, low-capacity, shorter-duration tests may not sufficiently inform fundamental materials phenomena that will impact LDES battery performance. This case highlights the importance that candidate LDES batteries be tested under pertinent long-duration conditions.

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Molten sodium batteries: advances in chemistries, electrolytes, and interfaces

Frontiers in Batteries and Electrochemistry

Hill, Ryan C.; Gross, Martha S.; Percival, Stephen J.; Peretti, Amanda; Small, Leo J.; Spoerke, Eric; Cheng, Yang-Tse

The need for clean, renewable energy has driven the expansion of renewable energy generators, such as wind and solar. However, to achieve a robust and responsive electrical grid based on such inherently intermittent renewable energy sources, grid-scale energy storage is essential. The unmet need for this critical component has motivated extensive grid-scale battery research, especially exploring chemistries “beyond Li-ion”. Among others, molten sodium (Na) batteries, which date back to the 1960s with Na-S, have seen a strong revival, owing mostly to raw material abundance and the excellent electrochemical properties of Na metal. Recently, many groups have demonstrated important advances in battery chemistries, electrolytes, and interfaces to lower material and operating costs, enhance cyclability, and understand key mechanisms that drive failure in molten Na batteries. For widespread implementation of molten Na batteries, though, further optimization, cost reduction, and mechanistic insight is necessary. In this light, this work provides a brief history of mature molten Na technologies, a comprehensive review of recent progress, and explores possibilities for future advancements.

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Can a Coating Mitigate Molten Na Dendrite Growth in NaSICON Under High Current Density?

ACS Applied Energy Materials

Hill, Ryan C.; Peretti, Amanda; Maraschky, Adam M.; Small, Leo J.; Spoerke, Eric; Cheng, Yang T.

Alkali metals are among the most desirable negative electrodes for long duration energy storage due to their extremely high capacities. Currently, only high-temperature (>250 °C) batteries have successfully used alkali electrodes in commercial applications, due to limitations imposed by solid electrolytes, such as low conductivity at moderate temperatures and susceptibility to dendrites. Toward enabling the next generation of grid-scale, long duration batteries, we aim to develop molten sodium (Na) systems that operate with commercially attractive performance metrics including high current density (>100 mA cm-2), low temperature (<200 °C), and long discharge times (>12 h). In this work, we focus on the performance of NaSICON solid electrolytes in sodium symmetric cells at 110 °C. Specifically, we use a tin (Sn) coating on NaSICON to reduce interfacial resistance by a factor of 10, enabling molten Na symmetric cell operation with “discharge” durations up to 23 h at 100 mA cm-2 and 110 °C. Unidirectional galvanostatic testing shows a 70% overpotential reduction, and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) highlights the reduction in interfacial resistance due to the Sn coating. Detailed scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) show that Sn-coated NaSICON enables current densities of up to 500 mA cm-2 at 110 °C by suppressing dendrite formation at the plating interface (Mode I). This analysis also provides a mechanistic understanding of dendrite formation at current densities up to 1000 mA cm-2, highlighting the importance of effective coatings that will enable advanced battery technologies for long-term energy storage.

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Transport and Energetics of Carbon Dioxide in Ionic Liquids at Aqueous Interfaces

Journal of Physical Chemistry B

Sharma, Arjun; Leverant, Calen J.; Richards, Danielle; Beamis, Christopher P.; Spoerke, Eric; Percival, Stephen J.; Rempe, Susan B.; Vanegas, Juan M.

A major hurdle in utilizing carbon dioxide (CO2) lies in separating it from industrial flue gas mixtures and finding suitable storage methods that enable its application in various industries. To address this issue, we utilized a combination of molecular dynamics simulations and experiments to investigate the behavior of CO2 in common room-temperature ionic liquids (RTIL) when in contact with aqueous interfaces. Our investigation of RTILs, [EMIM][TFSI] and [OMIM][TFSI], and their interaction with a pure water layer mimics the environment of a previously developed ultrathin enzymatic liquid membrane for CO2 separation. We analyzed diffusion constants and viscosity, which reveals that CO2 molecules exhibit faster mobility within the selected ILs compared to what would be predicted solely based on the viscosity of the liquids using the standard Einstein-Stokes relation. Moreover, we calculated the free energy of translocation for various species across the aqueous-IL interface, including CO2 and HCO3-. Free energy profiles demonstrate that CO2 exhibits a more favorable partitioning behavior in the RTILs compared to that in pure water, while a significant barrier hinders the movement of HCO3- from the aqueous layer. Experimental measurement of the CO2 transport in the RTILs corroborates the model. These findings strongly suggest that hydrophobic RTILs could serve as a promising option for selectively transporting CO2 from aqueous media and concentrating it as a preliminary step toward storage.

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Results 1–25 of 314
Results 1–25 of 314
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