Phase Behavior and Ion Dynamics of Nanoconfined LiBH4 in Silica

The increasing demand for high capacity yet safe storage of renewable energy calls for the development of all-solid-state batteries. A major hurdle in this development is the identification of new suitable types of solid-state electrolytes. Nanoconfined lithium borohydride is a solid-state electroly...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of physical chemistry. C 2019-10, Vol.123 (42), p.25559-25569
Hauptverfasser: Lambregts, Sander F. H, van Eck, Ernst R. H, Suwarno, Ngene, Peter, de Jongh, Petra E, Kentgens, Arno P. M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The increasing demand for high capacity yet safe storage of renewable energy calls for the development of all-solid-state batteries. A major hurdle in this development is the identification of new suitable types of solid-state electrolytes. Nanoconfined lithium borohydride is a solid-state electrolyte candidate due to its high lithium-ion mobility at ambient temperatures. The origin of the high lithium-ion mobility is not fully understood, however. We studied nanocomposites of lithium borohydride and nanoporous silica Santa Barbara Amorphous-15 (SBA-15) with different pore sizes, using 1H, 6,7Li, and 11B solid-state NMR at various temperatures, to get in-depth insights into the phase behavior and ion dynamics of lithium borohydride in the silica pores. The results allow us to formulate a detailed dynamic model for lithium borohydride confined in SBA-15; bulklike LiBH4 is separated from the pore walls by an amorphous, highly dynamic LiBH4 fraction displaying both Li+ and BH4 – diffusion even at ambient temperatures. As shown by 11B temperature-jump exchange NMR, this dynamic fraction increases as a function of temperature. Li+ exchange between the bulklike and “dynamic” LiBH4 fraction is slow at ambient temperatures, but at elevated temperatures (≥90 °C), above the phase transition of the bulklike fraction, lithium ions rapidly diffuse through both LiBH4 fractions and exchange between these confined fractions at rates approaching the megahertz time scale.
ISSN:1932-7447
1932-7455
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcc.9b06477