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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(35): 42015-42025, 2023 Sep 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37611069

RESUMEN

Lithium metal has generated significant interest as an anode material because of its high theoretical capacity. However, issues such as dendrite growth and lithium loss during cycling make this material incompatible with liquid electrolytes. Solid polymer electrolytes (SPE) have been proposed as replacements as they are non-flammable, resist dendrite growth, have decent ionic conductivity, and have low resistance with lithium metal. Passivation layers, which form on the lithium metal surface and are hence intrinsic to its chemical composition, are often overlooked. Residual quantities of atmospheric gases are present in lithium metal storage environments, making surface modification and its subsequent impact on anode reactivity inevitable. Moreover, the impact of this phenomenon in a realistic lithium metal anode (LMA) environment with SPE has not yet been extensively investigated. In this study, the impact of gas exposure on an LMA was investigated by exposing freshly cut lithium rods to O2, CO2, and N2. Passivation layers were characterized via X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The effect of passivation layer formation on LMA reactivity toward SPE was measured by exposing passivated samples to common SPE materials. The resultant interface was characterized using Raman spectroscopy. SPE-passivation layer reactivity was correlated to ageing by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and kinetic charge transfer via galvanostatic linear polarization at the LMA-SPE interface in symmetric Li─SPE─Li stacks. This study revealed that the chemical composition of the passivation layer affects LMA reactivity toward SPE and electrochemical performance. A thorough characterization of the lithium metal passivation layer is essential to understanding the fundamental factors affecting solid-state lithium metal battery performance.

2.
MRS Energy Sustain ; 7(1): 33, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38624624

RESUMEN

Hydrogen is often touted as the fuel of the future, but hydrogen is already an important feedstock for the chemical industry. This review highlights current means for hydrogen production and use, and the importance of progressing R&D along key technologies and policies to drive a cost reduction in renewable hydrogen production and enable the transition of chemical manufacturing toward green hydrogen as a feedstock and fuel. The chemical industry is at the core of what is considered a modern economy. It provides commodities and important materials, e.g., fertilizers, synthetic textiles, and drug precursors, supporting economies and more broadly our needs. The chemical sector is to become the major driver for oil production by 2030 as it entirely relies on sufficient oil supply. In this respect, renewable hydrogen has an important role to play beyond its use in the transport sector. Hydrogen not only has three times the energy density of natural gas and using hydrogen as a fuel could help decarbonize the entire chemical manufacturing, but also the use of green hydrogen as an essential reactant at the basis of many chemical products could facilitate the convergence toward virtuous circles. Enabling the production of green hydrogen at cost could not only enable new opportunities but also strengthen economies through a localized production and use of hydrogen. Herein, existing technologies for the production of renewable hydrogen including biomass and water electrolysis, and methods for the effective storage of hydrogen are reviewed with an emphasis on the need for mitigation strategies to enable such a transition.

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