idw – Informationsdienst Wissenschaft

Nachrichten, Termine, Experten

Grafik: idw-Logo
Science Video Project
idw-Abo

idw-News App:

AppStore

Google Play Store



Instanz:
Teilen: 
31.07.2019 11:44

“Frustrated” ions for solid-state batteries

Mag. Susanne Eigner Kommunikation und Marketing
Technische Universität Graz

    An international team involving researchers from TU Graz has published research into a new solid-state electrolyte for batteries. The material exhibits one of the fastest lithium mobility processes ever measured in a lithium-ion conductor.

    Solid-state batteries are currently the most promising technology helping to pave the way for the breakthrough of electric mobility. Batteries containing solid-state electrolytes, in which the lithium ions move between the electrodes, are the Holy Grail of solid-state battery research. Such systems have clear advantages over conventional lithium-ion batteries, which contain liquid electrolytes. Solid-state solutions have a higher energy density and are significantly safer due to their non-flammable components.

    However, what was missing until now were suitable materials with conductivity levels comparable to liquid electrolytes. Together with colleagues from the Technical University of Munich and UCLouvain in Belgium, TU Graz researchers have now published details of a promising crystalline ionic conductor which exhibits remarkably high lithium-ion mobility, in the journal Chem. The diffusion coefficient exceeds that of the other most likely candidates currently being researched.

    Ions searching in vain for a place to rest

    The new ionic conductor is a lithium-titanium thiophosphate named LTPS, a reference to its chemical formula LiTi2(PS4)3. LTPS has an unusual crystalline structure characterised by what is known as “geometric frustration”. In contrast to other ionic conductors, LTPS offers no energetically highly favourable sites for the ions to occupy. They are never satisfied with their current position which creates a state of “frustration”. Calculations made by Geoffroy Hautier’s research team at UCLouvain in Belgium reveal that this frustration of the ions results in exceptionally high lithium mobility.

    “The lithium ions seek out suitable sites in a rather frantic way, meaning that they move through LTPS’s crystallographic structure extremely rapidly. This high ionic mobility is exactly what we’re after for use in solid-state electrolytes for solid-state batteries,” explains Martin Wilkening from TU Graz’s Institute for Chemistry and Technology of Materials and Director of the university’s Christian Doppler Laboratory for Lithium Batteries.

    Movement even at very low temperatures

    Wilkening’s team confirmed the predicted high degree of mobility experimentally using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy techniques. Martin Wilkening continues: “We found clear evidence of two jump processes which entirely corroborate the results of our calculations. In the structure of LTPS, the lithium-ions can jump via ring-shaped paths back and forth, and from one ring to the next. The latter of these processes, the inter-ring process, enables the long-range ionic transport.”

    Even under cryogenic conditions – so at extremely low temperatures – it was not possible to shut off the intra -ring jump processes of the lithium ions completely. The lithium ions are still mobile at 20 kelvin – or minus 253 degrees Celsius – on the NMR spectroscopy sensitivity scale, and search for suitable potential wells within the very flat energy landscape exhibited by LTPS. Such behaviour is exceptionally rare according to Wilkening: “At lower temperatures the ions are sapped of their thermal energy and their mobility decreases significantly. It’s remarkable that we observed ionic mobility even at such low temperatures in LTPS. This is evidence of how strong the ion’s compulsion to move around in LTPS is.” The working temperature of a solid state battery, in an electric car for instance, will of course never need to be so low.

    Representing a new class of materials

    This super-fast diffusion process, the result of energetic frustration, makes LTPS one of a new class of solid-state electrolytes. Although these electrolytes are crystalline, their motional properties are more similar to those of liquid electrolytes. The discovery and experimental research into LTPS is now the starting point in the search for further compounds with characteristics which facilitate similar conduction mechanisms.

    The study was conducted in collaboration with Toyota. UCLouvain has filed a patent for the discovery of LTPS.

    Cooperation partners (in alphabetical order):
    - Toyota Motor Europe
    - TU Graz
    - TU Munich
    - Université catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain; Belgium)
    - Toray Research Center (Japan)

    Original publication:
    Di Stefan et al., Superionic diffusion through frustrated energy landscape, Chem (2019), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chempr.2019.07.001

    This publication belongs to the Field of Expertise "Advanced Materials Science", one of five strategic focal areas of TU Graz.

    The experts at the Christian Doppler Laboratory for Lithium Batteries are specialists in the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of lithium-ion conductors. There are only a few research groups in the world which are able to measure dynamic processes in crystalline solid states with the required precision and with such a range of NMR spectroscopy techniques.


    Wissenschaftliche Ansprechpartner:

    Martin WILKENING
    Univ.-Prof. Dr.rer.nat.
    TU Graz | Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Materials
    Tel.: +43 664 887 969 57
    wilkening@tugraz.at


    Originalpublikation:

    Di Stefan et al., Superionic diffusion through frustrated energy landscape, Chem (2019), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chempr.2019.07.001


    Bilder

    A new class of solid electrolytes for the solid battery of tomorrow: crystalline, but similar to liquid electrolytes in terms of ion mobility.
    A new class of solid electrolytes for the solid battery of tomorrow: crystalline, but similar to liq ...
    Quelle: © Lunghammer - TU Graz

    In addition to the Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Materials, Martin Wilkening also heads the Christian Doppler Laboratory for Lithium Batteries, based at TU Graz.
    In addition to the Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Materials, Martin Wilkening also heads t ...
    Quelle: © Lunghammer - TU Graz


    Merkmale dieser Pressemitteilung:
    Journalisten, Wirtschaftsvertreter
    Chemie, Elektrotechnik, Energie, Werkstoffwissenschaften
    überregional
    Forschungsergebnisse, Wissenschaftliche Publikationen
    Englisch


     

    A new class of solid electrolytes for the solid battery of tomorrow: crystalline, but similar to liquid electrolytes in terms of ion mobility.


    Zum Download

    x

    In addition to the Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Materials, Martin Wilkening also heads the Christian Doppler Laboratory for Lithium Batteries, based at TU Graz.


    Zum Download

    x

    Hilfe

    Die Suche / Erweiterte Suche im idw-Archiv
    Verknüpfungen

    Sie können Suchbegriffe mit und, oder und / oder nicht verknüpfen, z. B. Philo nicht logie.

    Klammern

    Verknüpfungen können Sie mit Klammern voneinander trennen, z. B. (Philo nicht logie) oder (Psycho und logie).

    Wortgruppen

    Zusammenhängende Worte werden als Wortgruppe gesucht, wenn Sie sie in Anführungsstriche setzen, z. B. „Bundesrepublik Deutschland“.

    Auswahlkriterien

    Die Erweiterte Suche können Sie auch nutzen, ohne Suchbegriffe einzugeben. Sie orientiert sich dann an den Kriterien, die Sie ausgewählt haben (z. B. nach dem Land oder dem Sachgebiet).

    Haben Sie in einer Kategorie kein Kriterium ausgewählt, wird die gesamte Kategorie durchsucht (z.B. alle Sachgebiete oder alle Länder).