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Diagnostics and Degradation Investigations of Li-Ion Battery Electrodes using Single Nanowire Electrochemical CellsPalapati, Naveen kumar reddy, Palapati, Naveen kumar reddy 01 January 2016 (has links)
Portable energy storage devices, which drive advanced technological devices, are improving the productivity and quality of our everyday lives. In order to meet the growing needs for energy storage in transportation applications, the current lithium-ion (Li-ion) battery technology requires new electrode materials with performance improvements in multiple aspects: (1) energy and power densities, (2) safety, and (3) performance lifetime. While a number of interesting nanomaterials have been synthesized in recent years with promising performance, accurate capabilities to probe the intrinsic performance of these high-performance materials within a battery environment are lacking. Most studies on electrode nanomaterials have so far used traditional, bulk-scale techniques such as cyclic voltammetry, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. These approaches give an ensemble-average estimation of the electrochemical properties of a battery electrode and does not provide a true indication of the performance that is intrinsic to its material system. Thus, new techniques are essential to understand the changes happening at a single particle level during the operation of a battery. The results from this thesis solve this need and study the electrical, mechanical and size changes that take place in a battery electrode at a single particle level.
Single nanowire lithium cells are built by depositing nanowires in carefully designed device regions of a silicon chip using Dielectrophoresis (DEP). This work has demonstrated the assembly of several NW cathode materials like LiFePO4, pristine and acid-leached α-MnO2, todorokite – MnO2, acid and nonacid-leached Na0.44MnO2. Within these materials, α-MnO2 was chosen as the model material system for electrochemical experiments. Electrochemical lithiation of pristine α-MnO2 was performed inside a glove box. The volume, elasticity and conductivity changes were measured at each state-of-charge (SOC) to understand the performance of the material system. The NW size changes due to lithiation were measured using an Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) in the tapping mode. Electronic conductivity changes as a function of lithiation was also studied in the model α-MnO2 NWs and was found to decrease substantially with lithium loading. In other measurements involving a comparison between the alpha and todorokite phases of this material system, it was observed that the rate capability of these materials is limited not by the electronic but, by the ionic conductivity.
Mechanical degradation of a battery cathode represents an important failure mode, which results in an irreversible loss of capacity with cycling. To analyze and understand these degradation mechanisms, this thesis has tested the evolution of nanomechanical properties of a battery cathode. Specifically, contact-mode AFM measurements have focused on the SOC-dependent changes in the Young’s modulus and fracture strength of an α-MnO2 NW electrode, which are critical parameters that determine its mechanical stability. These changes have been studied at the end of the first discharge step, 1 full electrochemical cycle, and 20 cycles. The observations show an increase in Young’s modulus at low concentrations of lithium loading and this is attributed to the formation of new Li-O bonds within the tunnel-structured cathode. As the lithium loading increases further, the Young’s modulus was observed to reduce and this is hypothesized to occur due to the distortions of the crystal at high lithium concentrations. The experimental-to-theoretical fracture strength ratio, which points to the defect density in the crystal at a given stoichiometry, was observed to reduce with electrochemical lithium insertion / cycling. This capability has demonstrated lithiation-dependent mechanical property measurements for the first time and represents an important contribution since degradation models, which are currently in use for materials at any size scale, always assume constant values regardless of the change in stoichiometry.
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Imagerie de nanofils uniques par diffraction cohérente des rayons X / Coherent X-ray imaging of single nanowiresMastropietro, Francesca 04 October 2011 (has links)
L'imagerie par diffraction des rayons X coh´erents (CDI) en condition de Bragg est utilis´e pour ´etudier la d´eformation de nano-objets uniques. Ceci est possible grˆace au d´eveloppement d'optique focalisante, comme les lentilles de Fresnel (FZP), produisant un faisceau sub-micronique coh´erent. Les nanostructure ´etudi´ees sont reconstruite avec des algorithmes d'inversion `a partir de donn´ees de diffraction, sous la forme d'un objet complexe, o`u l'amplitude correspond `a la densit´e ´electronique 3D et la phase correspond `a la projection de la d´eformation de l'objet (par rapport `a un r´eseau cristallin parfait) dans la direction du vecteur de diffraction. Dans ce travail, nous avons ´etudi´e la d´eformation dans des nanofils h´et´erognes (nanofil de GaAs avec une mono-couche de boˆıtes quantiques de InAs) et homog`enes (silicium fortement contraint sur isolant (sSOI)). Lorsqu'un faisceau focalis´e de rayons X est utilis´e, `a la fois l'amplitude et la phase de l'onde incidente doivent ˆetre connu pour une ´etude quantitative. Le faisceau focalis´e utilis´e pendant les exp´eriences a ´et´e recontruit avec la technique CDI, et les effets de cette fonction d'illumination sur l'imagerie de nanofils contraints ont ´et´e ´etudi´es. Mots-cl´es: Imagerie par diffraction x coh´erente, contrainte, nanofils, algorithms d'inversion / The coherent diffraction imaging technique (CDI) in Bragg condition can be used to study strain in single nanowires. This is possible due to the recent development of dedicated focusing optics, e.g. Fresnel Zone Plate (FZP), offering the possibility of focusing x-ray beams to sub-micron sizes while preserving a coherent beam. This technique allows to reconstruct (using phase retrieval algorithms) the studied nanostructure as a complex-valued density map, where the amplitude corresponds to the electronic density and the phase to the displacement of the atoms with respect to a perfect crystalline lattice projected onto the scattering vector. The application of CDI to image the strain into heterogeneous (GaAs nanowire with an insertion of 1 monolayer of quantum dots and InSb nanowire with and insertion of InP) and homogeneous highly stressed nano-structures (strained Silicon-on-Insulator lines) has been studied in this work. When using focused X-ray beams, both the amplitude and of the incoming wavefield must be known for a quantitative reconstruction. CDI has been used to reconstruct the coherent wavefield used during experiments and the effects of this illumination function for the imaging of strained nanowires have been also studied. Keywords: Coherent X-ray diffraction imaging, strain, nanowires, phase retrieval algorithm
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