| Literature DB >> 25215517 |
Jun Lu1, Lei Cheng2, Kah Chun Lau2, Eric Tyo2, Xiangyi Luo1, Jianguo Wen3, Dean Miller3, Rajeev S Assary2, Hsien-Hau Wang2, Paul Redfern1, Huiming Wu1, Jin-Bum Park4, Yang-Kook Sun4, Stefan Vajda5, Khalil Amine1, Larry A Curtiss6.
Abstract
Lithium-oxygen batteries have the potential needed for long-range electric vehicles, but the charge and discharge chemistries are complex and not well understood. The active sites on cathode surfaces and their role in electrochemical reactions in aprotic lithium-oxygen cells are difficult to ascertain because the exact nature of the sites is unknown. Here we report the deposition of subnanometre silver clusters of exact size and number of atoms on passivated carbon to study the discharge process in lithium-oxygen cells. The results reveal dramatically different morphologies of the electrochemically grown lithium peroxide dependent on the size of the clusters. This dependence is found to be due to the influence of the cluster size on the formation mechanism, which also affects the charge process. The results of this study suggest that precise control of subnanometre surface structure on cathodes can be used as a means to improve the performance of lithium-oxygen cells.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25215517 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919