Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Events in Physics

Show all calendar items

Louis. F. J. Piper (WMG): A surface physicists’ perspective of Li-ion battery cathodes

- Export as iCalendar
Location: Online

Strain-engineering and chemical doping of 3d transition metal oxides provide a rich playground for condensed matter physics, where phase transformations and new states of matter can be studied. At the heart of today’s Li-ion battery industry is the layered 3d metal oxide, Li1-xCoO2, which is used as the positive electrode. The reversible intercalation of Li ions from the lattice results in large lattice changes (>5%) and phase transformations induce heterogeneity at the atomic scale that ultimately limit the battery performance and lifetime. Although the full theoretical capacity of the LiCoO2 is 274 mAh/g assuming full reversible Li extraction, the practical capacity is generally capped to half that i.e., voltage capped to avoid degradation due to phase transformations. To ultimately achieve energy density targets for the automotive industry of 500 Wh/Kg requires cathodes realizing > 250 mA/g. As a result, technological progress requires fundamental insight that a physics toolbox can provide regarding the evolution of LiCoO2 derived cathode materials.

In this talk, I will summarize work employing a suite of Synchrotron-based techniques to bridge length scales in order to provide a complete description of the evolution of state-of-the-art Ni-rich cathode: Li1-xNi0.8Co0.15Al0.5O2 (NCA) as we push towards full de-lithiation i.e., high voltages vs. Li+/Li0. Our recent studies have provided new insight into what is driving the surface degradation at high voltages and how it facilitates heterogeneity at the atomic scale limiting the battery performance.

Show all calendar items

Academic Leave Diary

Click here

 

Physics Days

Event listing

Research Group Events

Theory

CFSA

Astronomy

Particle Physics

Complexity

CSC

Condensed Matter Physics

.

Open Funder Deadlines


UKRI - Daphne Jackson Fellowship

Diamond Studentships 2024

.

UKRI Deadlines

Due to the implementation of a new UKRI funding system (TFS) there will be a fixed quarterly deadlines for some grants which would previously have been on open calls, this is to allow necessary system amendments and updates.

The first deadline after implementation will be 28th September 2023 and applies to those calls listed below:

EPSRC New Investigator Award

EPSRC Network Grant

EPSRC Post Doctoral Fellowship

EPSRC Open Fellowship

EPSRC Open Plus Fellowship

EPSRC Working with overseas scientists

EPSRC Standard research grant

EPSRC Discipline hopping in ICT

EPSRC Overseas travel grant