Browsing by Author "Hu, Anyang"
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- Investigating Particle Size-Dependent Redox Kinetics and Charge Distribution in Disordered Rocksalt CathodesZhang, Yuxin; Hu, Anyang; Liu, Jue; Xu, Zhengrui; Mu, Linqin; Sainio, Sami; Nordlund, Dennis; Li, Luxi; Sun, Cheng-Jun; Xiao, Xianghui; Liu, Yijin; Lin, Feng (Wiley-V C H Verlag, 2022-04)Understanding how various redox activities evolve and distribute in disordered rocksalt oxides (DRX) can advance insights into manipulating materials properties for achieving stable, high-energy batteries. Herein, the authors present how the reaction kinetics and spatial distribution of redox activities are governed by the particle size of DRX materials. The size-dependent electrochemical performance is attributed to the distinct cationic and anionic reaction kinetics at different sizes, which can be tailored to achieve optimal capacity and stability. Overall, the local charged domains in DRX particles display random heterogeneity caused by the isotropic delithiation pathways. Owing to the kinetic limitation, the micron-sized particles exhibit a holistic "core-shell" charge distribution, whereas sub-micron particles show more uniform redox reactions throughout the particles and ensembles. Sub-micron DRX particles exhibit increasing anionic redox activities yet inferior cycling stability. In summary, engineering particle size can effectively modulate how cationic and anionic redox activities evolve and distribute in DRX materials.
- Investigating the interfacial process and bulk electrode chemistry in tungsten oxide electrochromic materialsHu, Anyang (Virginia Tech, 2020)The growing need for high-performance electrode materials in electrochemical conversion and storage applications requires further fundamental investigation on the working and degradation mechanisms of these materials. Among various functional materials, transition metal oxides are still one of the main choices due to their tunable chemical compositions and diverse crystal structures in most aqueous and organic electrolytes. The charge transfer process mainly occurs at the electrode-electrolyte interface, and controlling the electrochemical interfacial stability represents a key challenge in developing sustainable and cost-effective electrochromic materials. The present thesis focuses on classical tungsten trioxide (WO3) materials as the platform to uncover the previously unknown interrelationship between phase transformation, morphological evolution, nanoscale color heterogeneity, and performance degradation in these materials during 3,000 cyclic voltammetry cycles. Through the application of novel cell design, synchrotron/electron spectroscopic, and imaging analyses, we observe that the interface between the WO3 electrode and 0.5 M sulfuric acid electrolyte undergoes constant changes due to the tungsten oxide dissolution and redeposition. The redeposition of dissolved tungsten species provokes in situ crystal growth, which ultimately leads to phase transformation from the semicrystalline WO3 to a nanoflake-shaped, proton-trapped tungsten trioxide dihydrate (HxWO3·2H2O). The multidimensional (surface and bulk) quantification of the electronic structure with X-ray measurements reveals that the tungsten reduction caused by proton trapping is heterogeneous at the nanometric scale and is responsible for the nanoscale color heterogeneity. The Coulombic efficiency, optical modulation, apparent diffusion coefficients, and switching kinetics are gradually diminished during 3,000 cyclic voltammetry cycles, resulting from the structural and chemical changes of the WO3 electrode. We hypothesize that the high interfacial reactivity in the electrode-electrolyte interfacial region could be the universal underlying mechanism leading to undesired bulk structural changes of inorganic electrochromic materials.
- Operando characterization and regulation of metal dissolution and redeposition dynamics near battery electrode surfaceZhang, Yuxin; Hu, Anyang; Xia, Dawei; Hwang, Sooyeon; Sainio, Sami; Nordlund, Dennis; Michel, F. Marc; Moore, Robert B.; Li, Luxi; Lin, Feng (Nature Portfolio, 2023-07)Mn dissolution has been a long-standing, ubiquitous issue that negatively impacts the performance of Mn-based battery materials. Mn dissolution involves complex chemical and structural transformations at the electrode–electrolyte interface. The continuously evolving electrode–electrolyte interface has posed great challenges for characterizing the dynamic interfacial process and quantitatively establishing the correlation with battery performance. In this study, we visualize and quantify the temporally and spatially resolved Mn dissolution/redeposition (D/R) dynamics of electrochemically operating Mn-containing cathodes. The particle-level and electrode-level analyses reveal that the D/R dynamics is associated with distinct interfacial degradation mechanisms at different states of charge. Our results statistically differentiate the contributions of surface reconstruction and Jahn–Teller distortion to the Mn dissolution at different operating voltages. Introducing sulfonated polymers (Nafion) into composite electrodes can modulate the D/R dynamics by trapping the dissolved Mn species and rapidly establishing local Mn D/R equilibrium. This work represents an inaugural effort to pinpoint the chemical and structural transformations responsible for Mn dissolution via an operando synchrotron study and develops an effective method to regulate Mn interfacial dynamics for improving battery performance.
- Spatiotemporal Visualization and Chemical Identification of the Metal Diffusion Layer at the Electrochemical InterfaceZhang, Yuxin; Hu, Anyang; Maxey, Evan; Li, Luxi; Lin, Feng (Electrochemical Society, 2022-10)The diffusion layer created by transition metal (TM) dissolution is ubiquitous at the electrochemical solid-liquid interface and plays a key role in determining electrochemical performance. Tracking the spatiotemporal dynamics of the diffusion layer has remained an unresolved challenge. With spatially resolved synchrotron X-ray fluorescence microscopy and micro-X-ray absorption spectroscopy, we demonstrate the in situ visualization and chemical identification of the dynamic diffusion layer near the electrode surface under electrochemical operating conditions. Our method allows for direct mapping of the reactive electrochemical interface and provides insights into engineering the diffusion layer for improving electrochemical performance.
- Tailoring Disordered/Ordered Phases to Revisit the Degradation Mechanism of High-Voltage LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4 Spinel Cathode MaterialsSun, Huabin; Hu, Anyang; Spence, Stephanie; Kuai, Chunguang; Hou, Dong; Mu, Linqin; Liu, Jue; Li, Luxi; Sun, Chengjun; Sainio, Sami; Nordlund, Dennis; Luo, Wei; Huang, Yunhui; Lin, Feng (Wiley-V C H Verlag, 2022-05)In the spinel oxide cathode family, LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4 (LNMO) shows a high operating voltage (approximate to 4.7 V vs Li/Li+) and excellent Li-ion mobility with stable 3D conducting channels. Ni/Mn cation disordered and ordered phases usually coexist in LNMO materials, and they have distinct structural and electrochemical properties, resulting in different battery performances for LNMO materials with different phase compositions. Identifying the correlation between phase compositions and electrochemical properties is of significance to the improvement of battery performance and understanding of degradation mechanisms. Herein, the disordered/ordered phase compositions in LNMO materials are tailored by post-annealing strategies and their impacts on electrochemical performance and degradation mechanisms from the surface to the bulk are systematically investigated. The ordered phase increases rapidly as Mn3+ is oxidized to Mn4+ through a post-annealing process. LNMO with an intermediate fraction of disordered and ordered phases gives rise to improved cycling stability. This article further reports that a high ordered phase fraction can preferentially protect Ni from dissolution during cycling. However, these results suggest that the transition metal dissolution and surface structural change of LNMO do not exhibit a direct correlation with cycling stability. These results indicate the capacity fading mainly correlates with the bulk structural distortion, leading to decreased Li-ion kinetics.
- Understanding Electrode-Electrolyte Interfaces with Metal Dissolution and Redeposition ChemistryHu, Anyang (Virginia Tech, 2023-01-18)The fundamental understanding of the dynamic characteristics of metal dissolution and redeposition behavior at the electrode-electrolyte interface is essential, which provides the basis for the development of advanced energy and conversion devices (such as electrochromic devices, electrocatalysts, and batteries) with superior electrochemical performances. We firstly demonstrate the feasibility of resynthesizing the electrode surface chemistry and tuning the electrochemical reactions at the solid-liquid interface by selectively changing the electrolyte composition and electrochemical cycling conditions. Amorphous TiO2 surface layers can be formed on WO3 electrodes by adding exotic Ti cations to the electrolyte, and slow electrochemical cycling. The dissolution and redeposition of electrodes and surface coatings are intertwined, helping to establish a dissolution-redeposition equilibrium at the interface, which can inhibit metal dissolution, stabilize electrode morphology, and promote electrochemical performance. Since the diffusion layer generated by the dissolution of transition metals is ubiquitous at the electrochemical solid-liquid interface, by combining in situ three-electrode electrochemical reaction cell with advanced spatially resolved synchrotron X-ray fluorescence microscopy and micro-X-ray absorption spectroscopy, we then successfully demonstrate the formation and chemical identification of the diffusion layer. By studying the evolution of diffusion layers(tens of micrometers thick) when using WO3 electrodes in acidic electrolytes, we find that with increasing distance of the dissolved species from the electrode surface, the oxidation state remains largely unchanged, but the local electronic environment of the dissolved W species becomes more distorted. We subsequently report a systematic experimental approach by collecting a series of twodimensional fluorescence images at the electrodes to study electrode dissolution and redeposition under different electrochemical conditions. The results show that (1) metal dissolution and redeposition behaviors greatly evolve under different electrode polarization and electrolyte compositions; (2) metal dissolution and redeposition behaviors are independent of bulk electrolyte pH but depend on interfacial pH; and (3) the accumulation of interfacial dissolved species promotes the formation of polytungstate interfacial networks, which ultimately manifest as temporal heterogeneity of redeposition. Lastly, we provide an in-depth study of the underlying mechanism of electrochemicalcycling induced crystallization at the electrode-electrolyte interface through a combination of advanced synchrotron radiation characterization techniques and an in situ electrochemical reaction setup. We have discovered that (1) foreign cations from the electrolyte engender both tensile and compressive strains inside the crystal; (2) repeated electrode dissolution and redeposition promote crystal growth through a non-classical crystallization pathway of particle attachment, but the initial growth of crystals is inhibited by internal strains; and (3) as the strain accumulates, the crystal rotates or moves, which is the fundamental reason for the dynamic structure evolution of the crystal during electrochemical cycling. To our knowledge, this is the first study of electrochemical-cycling-induced crystallization and its strain evolution. These new findings reveal a previously unknown relationship between crystal growth and its internal strain at the electrode-electrolyte interface.