• A stable 3 V all-solid-state sodium-ion battery based on a closo -borate electrolyte
    L. Duchêne, R.-S. Kühnel, E. Stilp, E.C. Reyes, A. Remhof, H. Hagemann and C. Battaglia
    Energy & Environmental Science, 10 (12) (2017), p2609-2615
    DOI:10.1039/C7EE02420G | Abstract
 
Lithium amide–borohydrides Li[BH4]1–x[NH2]x possess liquid-like Li superionic conductivity at nearly ambient temperature. The fast Li+ diffusion facilitated by the localized motions of the anions is proposed to occur through a network of vacant tetrahedral sites, acting as conduction channels. To study the reorientational dynamics of the anions, we have performed quasielastic neutron scattering experiments on samples with different compositions (x = 2/3, 0.722, 0.737, 3/4) over a broad temperature and time range. To unambiguously disentangle the contributions of the two species, [BH4]− and [NH2]−, we took advantage of deuterium labeling and could clearly demonstrate that the quasielastic broadening is mainly determined by the [BH4]− reorientations. With the help of a newly developed model, supported by ab initio molecular dynamics calculations, we have identified three relaxation components, which account for generally anisotropic C3-rotations of the [BH4]− tetrahedra including jumps by a small angle from the equilibrium position.
  
  • A highly stable sodium solid-state electrolyte based on a dodeca/deca-borate equimolar mixture
    L. Duchêne, R.-S. Kühnel, D. Rentsch, A. Remhof, H. Hagemann and C. Battaglia
    ChemComm, 53 (30) (2017), p4195-4198
    DOI:10.1039/C7CC00794A | unige:93532 | Abstract | Article HTML | Article PDF
Na2(B12H12)0.5(B10H10)0.5, a new solid-state sodium electrolyte is shown to offer high Na+ conductivity of 0.9 mS cm-1 at 20 °C, excellent thermal stability up to 300 °C, and a large electrochemical stability window of 3 V including stability towards sodium metal anodes, all essential prerequisites for a stable room-temperature 3 V all-solid-state sodium-ion battery.
  • Experimental evidence of librational vibrations determining the stability of calcium borohydride
    A. Borgschulte, R. Gremaud, A. Züttel, P. Martelli, A. Remhof, A.J. Ramirez-Cuesta, K. Refson, E.G. Bardaji, W. Lohstroh, M. Fichtner, H. Hagemann and M. Ernst
    Physical Review B, 83 (2) (2011), p24102
    DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.83.024102 | unige:14989 | Abstract | Article PDF
 
The high energy of hydrogen vibrations in solids is the origin of their strong impact on thermodynamic properties. The peculiar structure of complex hydrides amplifies this impact. We shed light on the vibrational properties of three allotropes of Ca(BH4)2 using density-functional theory calculations, infrared spectroscopy, and inelastic neutron scattering. We show that the vibrational properties of Ca(BH4)2 depend on the specific phase and are hitherto the origin of their differences in stability.

Google

 


Redisplay in format 

                 

    in encoding 

  
Format for journal references
Format for book references
Last update Tuesday March 26 2024