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Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics

[Image: see text] Solid electrolytes based on LiBH(4) receive much attention because of their high ionic conductivity, electrochemical robustness, and low interfacial resistance against Li metal. The highly conductive hexagonal modification of LiBH(4) can be stabilized via the incorporation of LiI....

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Autores principales: Zettl, Roman, Gombotz, Maria, Clarkson, David, Greenbaum, Steven G., Ngene, Peter, de Jongh, Petra E., Wilkening, H. Martin R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2020
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7453398/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32786241
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c10361
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author Zettl, Roman
Gombotz, Maria
Clarkson, David
Greenbaum, Steven G.
Ngene, Peter
de Jongh, Petra E.
Wilkening, H. Martin R.
author_facet Zettl, Roman
Gombotz, Maria
Clarkson, David
Greenbaum, Steven G.
Ngene, Peter
de Jongh, Petra E.
Wilkening, H. Martin R.
author_sort Zettl, Roman
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Solid electrolytes based on LiBH(4) receive much attention because of their high ionic conductivity, electrochemical robustness, and low interfacial resistance against Li metal. The highly conductive hexagonal modification of LiBH(4) can be stabilized via the incorporation of LiI. If the resulting LiBH(4)-LiI is confined to the nanopores of an oxide, such as Al(2)O(3), interface-engineered LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3) is obtained that revealed promising properties as a solid electrolyte. The underlying principles of Li(+) conduction in such a nanocomposite are, however, far from being understood completely. Here, we used broadband conductivity spectroscopy and (1)H, (6)Li, (7)Li, (11)B, and (27)Al nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to study structural and dynamic features of nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3). In particular, diffusion-induced (1)H, (7)Li, and (11)B NMR spin–lattice relaxation measurements and (7)Li-pulsed field gradient (PFG) NMR experiments were used to extract activation energies and diffusion coefficients. (27)Al magic angle spinning NMR revealed surface interactions of LiBH(4)-LiI with pentacoordinated Al sites, and two-component (1)H NMR line shapes clearly revealed heterogeneous dynamic processes. These results show that interfacial regions have a determining influence on overall ionic transport (0.1 mS cm(–1) at 293 K). Importantly, electrical relaxation in the LiBH(4)-LiI regions turned out to be fully homogenous. This view is supported by (7)Li NMR results, which can be interpreted with an overall (averaged) spin ensemble subjected to uniform dipolar magnetic and quadrupolar electric interactions. Finally, broadband conductivity spectroscopy gives strong evidence for 2D ionic transport in the LiBH(4)-LiI bulk regions which we observed over a dynamic range of 8 orders of magnitude. Macroscopic diffusion coefficients from PFG NMR agree with those estimated from measurements of ionic conductivity and nuclear spin relaxation. The resulting 3D ionic transport in nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3) is characterized by an activation energy of 0.43 eV.
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spelling pubmed-74533982020-08-31 Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics Zettl, Roman Gombotz, Maria Clarkson, David Greenbaum, Steven G. Ngene, Peter de Jongh, Petra E. Wilkening, H. Martin R. ACS Appl Mater Interfaces [Image: see text] Solid electrolytes based on LiBH(4) receive much attention because of their high ionic conductivity, electrochemical robustness, and low interfacial resistance against Li metal. The highly conductive hexagonal modification of LiBH(4) can be stabilized via the incorporation of LiI. If the resulting LiBH(4)-LiI is confined to the nanopores of an oxide, such as Al(2)O(3), interface-engineered LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3) is obtained that revealed promising properties as a solid electrolyte. The underlying principles of Li(+) conduction in such a nanocomposite are, however, far from being understood completely. Here, we used broadband conductivity spectroscopy and (1)H, (6)Li, (7)Li, (11)B, and (27)Al nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to study structural and dynamic features of nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3). In particular, diffusion-induced (1)H, (7)Li, and (11)B NMR spin–lattice relaxation measurements and (7)Li-pulsed field gradient (PFG) NMR experiments were used to extract activation energies and diffusion coefficients. (27)Al magic angle spinning NMR revealed surface interactions of LiBH(4)-LiI with pentacoordinated Al sites, and two-component (1)H NMR line shapes clearly revealed heterogeneous dynamic processes. These results show that interfacial regions have a determining influence on overall ionic transport (0.1 mS cm(–1) at 293 K). Importantly, electrical relaxation in the LiBH(4)-LiI regions turned out to be fully homogenous. This view is supported by (7)Li NMR results, which can be interpreted with an overall (averaged) spin ensemble subjected to uniform dipolar magnetic and quadrupolar electric interactions. Finally, broadband conductivity spectroscopy gives strong evidence for 2D ionic transport in the LiBH(4)-LiI bulk regions which we observed over a dynamic range of 8 orders of magnitude. Macroscopic diffusion coefficients from PFG NMR agree with those estimated from measurements of ionic conductivity and nuclear spin relaxation. The resulting 3D ionic transport in nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3) is characterized by an activation energy of 0.43 eV. American Chemical Society 2020-08-05 2020-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7453398/ /pubmed/32786241 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c10361 Text en Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_ccby_termsofuse.html) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.
spellingShingle Zettl, Roman
Gombotz, Maria
Clarkson, David
Greenbaum, Steven G.
Ngene, Peter
de Jongh, Petra E.
Wilkening, H. Martin R.
Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics
title Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics
title_full Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics
title_fullStr Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics
title_full_unstemmed Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics
title_short Li-Ion Diffusion in Nanoconfined LiBH(4)-LiI/Al(2)O(3): From 2D Bulk Transport to 3D Long-Range Interfacial Dynamics
title_sort li-ion diffusion in nanoconfined libh(4)-lii/al(2)o(3): from 2d bulk transport to 3d long-range interfacial dynamics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7453398/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32786241
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c10361
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