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Oxygen vacancy migration and impact on high voltage DC polarization in 0.8BaTiO3–0.2BiZn0.5Ti0.5O3

Journal of the American Ceramic Society

Bishop, Sean R.; Blea-Kirby, Mia A.; Peretti, Amanda S.; Laros, James H.; Jauregui, Luis J.; Lowry, Daniel R.; Boro, Joseph; Coker, Eric N.; Bock, Jonathan A.

Electrical polarization and defect transport are examined in 0.8BaTiO3–0.2BiZn0.5Ti0.5O3, an attractive capacitor material for high power electronics. Oxygen vacancies are suggested to be the majority charge carrier at or below 250°C with a grain conduction hopping activation energy of 0.97 eV and 0.92 eV for thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC) and impedance spectroscopy measurements, respectively. At higher temperature, thermally generated electronic conduction with an activation energy of 1.6 eV is dominant. Significant oxygen vacancy concentration is indicated (up to ~1%) due to cation vacancy formation (i.e., acceptor defects) from observed Bi (and likely Zn) volatility. Oxygen vacancy diffusivity is estimated to be 10-12.8 cm2/s at 250°C. Low diffusivity and high activation energies are indicative of significant defect interactions. Dipolar oxygen vacancy defects are also indicated, with an activation energy of 0.59 eV from TSDC measurements. In conclusion, the large oxygen vacancy content leads to a short lifetime during high voltage (30 kV/cm), high temperature (250°C) direct current (DC) electrical measurements.

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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 S.; Small, Leo J.; Spoerke, Erik D.; 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 P.; Peretti, Amanda S.; Small, Leo J.; Spoerke, Erik D.; 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 S.; Maraschky, Adam M.; Small, Leo J.; Spoerke, Erik D.; 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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Electrode Blocking Due to Redox Reactions in Aluminum Chloride-Sodium Iodide Molten Salts

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Maraschky, Adam M.; Percival, Stephen P.; Lee, Rose Y.; Laros, James H.; Peretti, Amanda S.; Spoerke, Erik D.; Small, Leo J.

Iodide redox reactions in molten NaI/AlCl3 are shown to generate surface-blocking films, which may limit the useful cycling rates and energy densities of molten sodium batteries below 150 °C. An experimental investigation of electrode interfacial stability at 110 °C reveals the source of the reaction rate limitations. Electrochemical experiments in a 3-electrode configuration confirm an increase of resistance on the electrode surface after oxidation or reduction current is passed. Using chronopotentiometry, chronoamperometry, cyclic voltammetry, and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, the film formation is shown to depend on the electrode material (W, Mo, Ta, or glassy carbon), as well as the Lewis acidity and molar ratio of I−/I3− in the molten salt electrolytes. These factors impact the amount of charge that can be passed at a given current density prior to developing excessive overpotential due to film formation that blocks the electrode surface. The results presented here guide the design and use of iodide-based molten salt electrolytes and electrode materials for grid scale battery applications.

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Dynamic high pressure phase transformation of ZrW2O8

AIP Advances

Bishop, Sean R.; Lowry, Daniel R.; Peretti, Amanda S.; Laros, James H.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Sarracino, Alex; Mahaffey, Jacob T.; Murray, Shannon E.

Phase transformations under high strain rates (dynamic compression) are examined in situ on ZrW2O8, a negative thermal expansion ternary ceramic displaying polymorphism. Amorphization, consistent with prior quasi-static measurements, was observed at a peak pressure of 3.0 GPa under dynamic conditions, which approximate those expected during fabrication. Evidence of partial amorphization was observed at lower pressure (1.8 GPa) that may be kinetically restrained by the short (<∼150 ns) time scale of the applied high pressure. The impact of kinetics of pressure-induced amorphization from material fabrication methods is briefly discussed.

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Molten Sodium Penetration in NaSICON Electrolytes at 0.1 A cm-2

ACS Applied Energy Materials

Hill, Ryan; Peretti, Amanda S.; Small, Leo J.; Spoerke, Erik D.; Cheng, Yang T.

High-conductivity solid electrolytes, such as the Na superionic conductor, NaSICON, are poised to play an increasingly important role in safe, reliable battery-based energy storage, enabling advanced sodium-based batteries. Coupled demands of increased current density (≥0.1 A cm-2) and low-temperature (<200 °C) operation, combined with increased discharge times for long-duration storage (>12 h), challenge the limitations of solid electrolytes. Here, we explore the penetration of molten sodium into NaSICON at high current densities. Previous studies of β″-alumina proposed that Poiseuille pressure-driven cracking (mode I) and recombination of ions and electrons within the solid electrolyte (mode II) are the two main mechanisms for Na penetration, but a comprehensive study of Na penetration in NaSICON is necessary, particularly at high current density. To further understand these modes, this work employs unidirectional galvanostatic testing of Na|NaSICON|Na symmetric cells at 0.1 A cm-2 over 23 h at 110 °C. While galvanostatic testing shows a relatively constant yet increasingly noisy voltage profile, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) reveals a significant decrease in cell impedance correlated with significant sodium penetration, as observed in scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Further SEM analysis of sodium accumulation within NaSICON suggests that mode II failure may be far more prevalent than previously considered. Further, these findings suggest that total (dis)charge density (mAh cm-2), as opposed to current density (mA cm-2), may be a more critical parameter when examining solid electrolyte failure, highlighting the challenge of achieving long discharge times in batteries using solid electrolytes. Together, these results provide a better understanding of the limitations of NaSICON solid electrolytes under high current and emphasize the need for improved electrode-electrolyte interfaces.

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Mechanical, Microstructural, and Electrochemical Characterization of NaSICON Sodium Ion Conductors [Poster]

Hill, Ryan C.; Hempel, Jacob; Cheng, Yang-Tse; Spoerke, Erik D.; Small, Leo J.; Gross, Martha S.; Peretti, Amanda S.

The DOE Office of Electricity views sodium batteries as a priority in pursuing a safe, resilient, and reliable grid. Improvements in solid-state electrolytes are key to realizing the potential of these large-scale batteries. NaSICON structure consists of SiO4 or PO4 tetrahedra sharing common corners with ZrO6 octahedra. Structure forms “tunnels” in three dimensions that can transport interstitial sodium ion. 3D structure provides higher ionic conductivity than other conductors (β’’-alumina), particularly at low temperature. Lower temperature (cheaper) processing compared to β’’-alumina. Our objective was to identify fundamental structure-processing-property relationships in NaSICON solid electrolytes to inform design for use in sodium batteries. In this work, the mechanical properties of NaSICON sodium ion conductors are affected by sodium conduction. Electrochemical cycling can alter modulus and hardness in NaSICON. Excessive cycling can lead to secondary phases and/or dendrite formation that change mechanical properties in NaSICON. Mechanical and electrochemical properties can be correlated with topographical features to further inform design decisions

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Processing, structure, and thermal properties of ZrW2O8, HfW2O8, HfMgW3O12, Al(HfMg)0.5W3O12, and Al0.5Sc1.5W3O12 negative and zero thermal expansion coefficient ceramics

Bishop, Sean R.; Lowry, Daniel R.; Peretti, Amanda S.; Laros, James H.; Salinas, Perla A.; Coker, Eric N.; Arata, Edward R.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Murray, Shannon E.; Mahaffey, Jacob T.; Biedermann, Laura B.

Negative and zero coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) materials are of interest for developing polymer composites in electronic circuits that match the expansion of Si and in zero CTE supports for optical components, e.g., mirrors. In this work, the processing challenges and stability of ZrW2O8, HfW2O8, HfMgW3O12, Al(HfMg)0.5W3O12, and Al0.5Sc1.5W3O12 negative and zero thermal expansion coefficient ceramics are discussed. Al0.5Sc1.5W3O12 is demonstrated to be a relatively simple oxide to fabricate in large quantity and is shown to exhibit single phase up to 1300 °C in air and inert N2 environments. The negative and zero CTE behavior was confirmed with dilatometry. Thermal conductivity and heat capacity were reported for the first time for HfMgW3O12 and Al0.5Sc1.5W3O12 and thermal conductivity was found to be very low (~0.5 W/mK). Grüneisen parameter is also estimated. Methods for integration of Al0.5Sc1.5W3O12 with other materials was examined and embedding 50 vol% of the ceramic powder in flexible epoxy was demonstrated with a commercial vendor.

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Results 1–25 of 93
Results 1–25 of 93