Nitin Muralidharan1,2, Rachel Carter2, Landon Oakes1,2, Adam P Cohn2, Cary L Pint1,2. 1. Interdisciplinary Materials Science Program, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235 USA. 2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235 USA.
Abstract
Strain engineering has been a critical aspect of device design in semiconductor manufacturing for the past decade, but remains relatively unexplored for other applications, such as energy storage. Using mechanical strain as an input parameter to modulate electrochemical potentials of metal oxides opens new opportunities intersecting fields of electrochemistry and mechanics. Here we demonstrate that less than 0.1% strain on a Ni-Ti-O based metal-oxide formed on superelastic shape memory NiTi alloys leads to anodic and cathodic peak potential shifts by up to ~30 mV in an electrochemical cell. Moreover, using the superelastic properties of NiTi to enable strain recovery also recovers the electrochemical potential of the metal oxide, providing mechanistic evidence of strain-modified electrochemistry. These results indicate that mechanical energy can be coupled with electrochemical systems to efficiently design and optimize a new class of strain-modulated energy storage materials.
Strain engineering has been a critical aspect of device design in semiconductor manufacturing for the past decade, but remains relatively unexplored for other applications, such as energy storage. Using mechanical strain as an input parameter to modulate electrochemical potentials of metal oxides opens new opportunities intersecting fields of electrochemistry and mechanics. Here we demonstrate that less than 0.1% strain on a Ni-Ti-O based metal-oxide formed on superelastic shape memory NiTi alloys leads to anodic and cathodic peak potential shifts by up to ~30 mV in an electrochemical cell. Moreover, using the superelastic properties of NiTi to enable strain recovery also recovers the electrochemical potential of the metal oxide, providing mechanistic evidence of strain-modified electrochemistry. These results indicate that mechanical energy can be coupled with electrochemical systems to efficiently design and optimize a new class of strain-modulated energy storage materials.
Traditional routes to design materials for electrochemical applications require
modification of material chemical composition to control reduction-oxidation energetics
when coupled with an electrolyte12. This causes the search for improved
nanomaterials in electrochemical applications to be driven by discovery-focused
nanomaterial synthesis and fabrication. Due to the complex cooperative nature of energy
storage device performance based on the pairing of electrodes and electrolytes, such
routes rarely lead to new materials with characteristics, such as operating voltage,
that outperform existing materials. Further, whereas computational guidance has brought
about a new paradigm to predict targeted material compounds that can improve advanced
energy storage systems34, experimentalists often remain challenged by
the synthesis process of such compounds, many of which are not naturally occurring. This
presents a fundamental bottleneck in the conventional approach in which
electrochemistry-oriented material research and development occurs that limits the rate
of industry innovation in energy storage (and conversion) systems.Strain engineering, a concept widely implemented in semiconductor electronics56, opens new opportunities to engineer materials for electrochemical
systems. The six-dimensional parameter space of the strain tensor7
enables a nanostructure with a fixed chemical composition to have electronic and
physical properties finely modulated in a manner that is virtually impossible to
replicate by varying chemical composition. Unlike bulk materials, many nanostructures
exhibit sizes where strain can homogenously propagate throughout the whole material,
instead of only on a surface or an interface6891011121314.
In this spirit, recent efforts have demonstrated the capability of strain in
nanostructures to modify the energy landscape of catalytic and electro-catalytic
surface-bound reactions1516171819 and modify oxygen ion diffusion
in fuel cell technology202122. The direct controlled correlation
between mechanical strain as an input parameter and electrochemical processes in
nanostructures for energy harvesting applications has only very recently been
reported23.In the specific case of energy storage electrodes such as pseudocapacitors and
batteries124, Faradaic reactions especially in metal oxides induce
a change to the oxidation state of the active material often regulated by the physical
characteristics of the lattice structure to enable insertion or alloying of an ion
species. Focus of current research efforts so far have been on the adverse effects of
strain arising from the changes to the host lattice structures during electrochemical
cycling of energy storage electrodes252627. In this regard,
mechanical strain imposed onto a nanostructure leading to both physical and electronic
changes that can synergistically influence energy storage redox reactions has not yet
been reported despite significant advances in the ability to produce, image, and
understand strain effects in materials1528, especially those related to
semiconductor electronics. Theoretical studies have recently highlighted the prospect of
pre-straining materials29 even though experimental efforts in this
direction remain elusive.Here we demonstrate a study where nanostructured metal oxide materials are synthesized
directly on the surface of a superelastic/shapememory NiTi wire. Under the application
of strain to the NiTi and transferred to the surface-bound oxides, we observe consistent
shifts in the anodic and cathodic potentials. By recovering this imposed strain, we
observe consistent recovery of the electrochemical potentials, clearly demonstrating
that strain, as opposed to other effects, is modulating the shifts in electrochemical
potentials and can be a viable tool for the design of energy storage materials.
Metal-oxide nanostructures on superelastic NiTi
A Ni-Ti-O based oxide was grown on NiTi superelastic wires at
600 °C comprising of a mixed NiO-TiO2 layer
formed on top of a titanate layer on the surface of the NiTi material3031. EDS maps (supporting
information) obtained from the surface of the wire indicated a mixed
Ni-Ti-O based surface oxide. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (Fig.
1a) was performed on the nanostructured surface oxides formed on the
wire. To study strain-related modifications to energy storage processes, NiTi wires
were tensile deformed to 10% and 15% strain at room temperature using an Instron
mechanical testing system, with a corresponding small percentage of this input
strain (less than 1%) transferred to the surface-bound oxide nanomaterial. The
strained and unstrained wires with the mixed oxide layers were sonicated in peroxide
at room temperature to impart nanotexturing to the oxide. This leads to a material
architecture where nanostructured petals of NiO-TiO2-based metal oxides
are conformally coated on the surface of a NiTi wire in a seamless manner (Fig. 1b). The Ni-Ti-O surface metal oxide was further examined
through Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) (supporting information, Figure S5) indicating the
crystalline nanostructure of the surface oxide. The presence of the constituent
elements of the nanostructured oxide (nickel, titanium, and oxygen) was further
verified using STEM EDS maps. This architecture is ideally suited to correlate
strain as an input parameter to the NiTi to assess its effect on the surface-bound
redox active Ni-Ti-O material for energy storage applications.
Figure 1
Strain engineering the surface oxide using NiTi alloy.
(a) SEM image of the active NiO-TiO2 based metal oxide
formed on the surface of the NiTi alloy. (b) Schematic illustration
of experimental system, including the application of strain and strain
recovery on a NiTi wire with surface-bound active material. (c)
Stress-strain behavior of the NiTi superelastic alloy deformed up to 10% and
15% tensile strain. The dashed lines and εRE
indicates the heat assisted transformation process and the recovered strain
respectively. (d) DSC thermograms of the unstrained (0%) and the
tensile strained (15%) states. Red (line and dots) represents the heating
cycle and blue line represents the cooling cycles.
The stress-strain response of the alloy is shown in Fig. 1c.
The deformation behavior of the wire is described by elastic deformation of the
austenite followed by the stress induced martensitic transformation below and up to
5% strain. Beyond 5% strain, oriented martensites begin to deform leading to plastic
deformation of oriented martensites above 15% strain. These stress induced
martensites can be transformed back to austenite by heating strained wires beyond
their austenitic finish (Af) temperatures. The final mechanical strain
input onto the NiTi alloy is ~8% and 11% for tensile deformations of 10%
and 15% respectively, due to the intrinsic mechanical recovery of the alloy32. Strain recovery (10% R, 15% R) in the alloy was also measured to be
~4.5% and 3.5% respectively.Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) thermograms on 15% deformed and 0% deformed
wires (Fig. 1d) demonstrates the transformation from stress
induced martensite to parent austenite during the first heating cycle is present for
the 15% tensile deformed wire in the temperature range of 50 to
60 °C whereas the unstrained (0%) wire showed no such
transformations in this temperature range. This transformation during the first
heating cycle is complete at a temperature of 60 °C which is
the austenitic finish temperature (Af). Based on the DSC results, the 15%
and 10% tensile deformed alloy was heated to 60 °C in vacuum
to complete the reverse transformation from stress induced martensitic state to
parent austenite state. The transformation temperature around
60 °C is ideal in the case of metal oxides to avoid
annealing effects which are prevalent at higher temperatures.
Spectroscopic strain analysis
As we use mechanical strain as an input parameter on NiTi to transfer strain to a
surface oxide active material, XRD and Raman spectroscopy provide insight into
strain transfer that enables controlled assessment of strain effects on
electrochemical measurements. To characterize the transfer of strain applied to the
superelastic/shapememory NiTi to the metal oxide nanostructured active material on
the surface, Raman spectroscopy was carried out with 532 nm excitations
(Fig. 2). The coupling of strain into a material will
modify local stretch modes, hence enabling Raman spectroscopy as a sensitive tool
for identifying strain in materials with distinct Raman modes. Similar to previous
reports on heat treated NiTi alloys33 we find the Raman spectra of
the nanostructured surface oxide to exhibit a strong peak near
269 cm−1 attributed to the titanate mode
which are the Raman active modes of NiTiO334353637,
peaks centered on 300 cm−1 and
342 cm−1 attributed to the Eg
modes of NiTiO338394041, and a peak near
454 cm−1 attributed to the Eg
mode of rutile phase TiO24243. Whereas shifts and
mode-splitting can be observed in these peaks as a function of applied strain,
statistical Raman maps over large areas of the surface (800–1000 total
Raman scans in each map) were performed to quantify strain-related shifts observed
in the active materials, specifically for the modes identified in Fig. 2a. Lorentzian fits were applied to these Raman modes (Fig. 2b,c) and statistically validated strain effects were
isolated. Upon strain recovery, these Raman modes revert back near or toward the
unstrained peak positions, indicating the correlation between the measured Raman
response and strain applied on the petaled nanostructured oxide surface.
Importantly, the shift and reversal of the Raman modes upon strain and strain
recovery across a large-area statistical sampling of the oxide without a significant
bimodal or broadening effect on the peak distributions indicates the absence of
interfacial delamination as a stress relief mechanism in this material system.
Furthermore, the E mode of NiTiO3 (Fig. 2d) and TiO2 (Fig. 2e) are
observed to exhibit similar recoverable shifts in the Raman modes that can be
correlated with strain and straightforwardly identified. The low intensities of the
observed Ni-O stretch modes444546 near
508 cm−1 and
571 cm−1 prohibited quantitative analysis
on these modes.
Figure 2
Characterizing strain on redox active nanostructures.
(a) Raman spectra of the strained (10% and 15%), unstrained (0%) and
recovered (10% R and 15% R) states. (b,c) Raman maps based on
800–1000 individual scans showing average strain
effect on titanate-NiTiO3 (b) and TiO2
(c) active materials. (d,e) Selected spectra and the
fitted curves of (d) Eg mode of NiTiO3 and
(e) Eg mode of TiO2 at various strained and
recovered states. (f) Selected X-Ray diffraction spectra and Gaussian
fits of the peak corresponding to (012) plane of TiO2 (brookite)
at various strained and recovered states. (g) Percent strain
corresponding to (f ) based on both strained and
recovered states. Note classifications of 10% and 15% strain correspond to
strain applied to NiTi only.
Despite the clear signature of strain deduced through Raman spectroscopy, X-ray
diffraction (XRD) provides further quantitative insight. XRD measurements indicate
the same trend as Raman spectroscopy, where shifts toward lower angles are observed
upon strain application, with recovery leading to the opposite shift. This is
specifically shown for the (012) plane of TiO2 (Brookite) in Fig. 2f,g. To accurately determine the strain on the surface
oxide using X-Ray diffractograms, Gaussian fits were applied to the obtained peaks.
A standard analytical procedure was used to correlate strain to the d-spacing
of the strained, unstrained, and recovered states given by the following
equation,where, d, d and
d represent the d-spacing of the tensile
strained states, the recovered states and the unstrained state, respectively. This
enables the strain experienced by the surface oxide to be accurately determined. The
application of 10% and 15% strain to the NiTi alloy is observed to transfer
~0.04% and ~0.08% strain to the surface oxide, which can
also be recovered as described in Fig. 1c. Full XRD analysis
of the material is discussed in the supporting
information. Strain transfer using NiTi superelastic/shapememory alloys
have so far been limited to metals17 and alloys deposited on the
surface with a maximum strain transfer of 2.18% achieved for an Fe-Ptmetal
alloy4748. The surface oxide on the NiTi alloy, being a brittle
ceramic is not as ductile as metals and metal alloys, therefore experiences cracking
with less than 1% applied strain49. Overall, strain measured at
<0.1% is expected due to the stress relief through cracking of the surface
oxide and strain transfer across a nanostructured-bulk interface. The oxide layer
will crack until reaching a critical tensile strain where the crack density
saturates and strain is further transferred to cracked islands to ”lock
in” elastic strain on the surface oxide50. This critical
tensile strain for crack density saturation is modulated by both the thickness of
the oxide layer as well as morphology of the nanostructured surface oxide. As 10%
and 15% strain applied to the NiTi alloy exceeds the critical tensile strain for the
thick oxide layer these measurements are carried out in a regime where increased
strain on the NiTi will lead to increased strain on the oxide layer, which can be
experimentally studied through Raman and XRD measurements. Moreover, XRD and Raman
spectroscopy provide a combined toolset that can together identify the signature of
elastic strain locked in a metal or metal oxide crystal structure to impact
electrochemical behavior17. Combined with the versatility of
superelastic/shape memory NiTi materials, this provides the ideal platform for
assessing and understanding the mechano-electrochemical response of the surface
oxide.
Strain engineered electrochemistry
To characterize the effect of quantifiable strain on electrochemical performance, we
build on the principle that Ni-Ti-O based oxide is active for the redox reaction
with OH− ions in alkaline electrolyte solutions335152. Due to the ability to strain set conductive NiTi alloys,
this provides an excellent platform for characterizing the role of strain
transferred to the active Ni-Ti-O containing surface oxide layer on the observed
redox couple in alkaline electrolytes. Cyclic Voltammetry (CV) was carried out using
2M NaOH electrolyte in a 3-electrode configuration with a Saturated Calomel
Electrode (SCE) reference and a platinum counter electrode at scan rates of
100 mV/s. As previous studies have demonstrated the stability of the SCE
reference electrode to address the electrochemical response of NiO,
Ni(OH)2, and Ni-Ti-O based metal oxides in alkaline solutions, it was
chosen as the reference electrode for the electrochemical tests51535455. (Figure 3) For purposes of
comparison, the current densities were normalized to analyze the potential shifts in
the anodic and cathodic branches. To accurately measure the redox peak potentials
and exclude other possible sources of errors, 100 CV sweeps at a scan rate of
100 mV/s were performed within the operating voltage window to obtain
reproducible voltammograms. To ensure accuracy, Gaussian fits were applied to the
anodic and cathodic peaks to measure the peak potentials. CV curves comparing redox
performance for both (1) different amounts of total strain applied to the
surface-bound NiO-TiO2 materials (Fig. 3a) and (2)
the same materials except with the strain recovered in a manner consistent with
Fig. 1c (Fig. 3b) elucidate the
principle that strain has an evident and reversible effect on the voltage of the
redox couple. In the first case, the shift of both the anodic and cathodic peaks
toward lower potentials indicates that the observed effect is not explained by
resistance or activation polarization in the electrode. The strain-induced
modification to the redox energetics is further highlighted by experiments where the
strain on the NiO-TiO2 based active material can be partially recovered,
leading to a shift of both the anodic and cathodic peaks toward the native potential
of the redox couple measured in the unstrained material. The observation that strain
recovery of the (strained) active material leads to reversal of shifts in the
electrochemical response associated with strain supports key ideas: (1) it mitigates
the role of other phenomena in the electrochemical potential shifts, since the
electrolytes, reference electrode, and testing conditions are otherwise invariant in
these tests, and (2) supports the integrity of the NiTi-oxide interface, since
delamination effects under strain applied to the NiTi would inhibit further strain
transfer or recovery and would expose the NiTi material to the electrolyte leading
to no measureable electrochemical material response. These results suggest for the
first time that mechanical strain as an input parameter can modify or control
electrochemical reduction potentials relevant to metal oxide based energy storage
materials. Whereas previous recent reports have indicated the effect of strain on
catalysis1617565758, our results are both consistent with
these reports, but with key differences. Similar to a catalytic system where
charge-transfer reactions are confined to a surface, reduction and oxidation
reactions contributing to the pseudocapacitance of NiO-TiO2 involves
surface reaction with OH− ion from the electrolyte.
Previous studies have indicated that doping effects can modify the oxidation state
changes of Ni-based metal oxides596061 where equilibrium redox
potential (E) shifts can be attributed to structural
distortions from doping59. In our study, we demonstrate mechanical
strain as an input parameter, verified by XRD and Raman spectroscopy, where the
local distortions of the surface oxide facilitate insertion of the
OH− ion into the surface oxide layer. This is
distinguished from shifts in E due to electrolyte
concentration, heating, or modification of reference potentials since strain
application and strain recovery trigger and reverses shifts in
E while electrolyte, reference electrode, and
testing conditions are invariant. This is enabled by taking advantage of the
shapememory response of NiTi alloy to recover the structural distortions imposed by
the applied tensile strain on the surface oxides, which in turn recovers the
electrochemical response. In all cases, we observe that tensile strain lowers the
equilibrium redox potential associated with the physical insertion of anions to
store energy in the NiO-TiO2-based material in a manner that correlates
with the total amount of applied strain (Fig. 4a and supporting information, Fig. S8). This
change in reduction potential can be reversed by recovering the strain imposed in
the material. As only elastic strains have the ability to simultaneously affect
Raman modes, lattice spacing, and electrochemical behavior, the NiTi platform
provides a versatile substrate for locking such strains in metal oxides deposited on
the surface.
Figure 3
Correlating strain to electrochemical response.
(a) Cyclic voltammograms with normalized current densities of the
unstrained and the tensile strained (0.04%) and (0.08%) states based on
surface oxides at a voltage window of 0.2 to 0.45 V. (b)
Cyclic voltammograms with normalized current densities of the unstrained and
recovered (0.02%) and (0.05%) states based on surface oxides at a voltage
window of 0.2 to 0.45 V at scan rate of
100 mV/s.
Figure 4
The role of strain to modify energy storage electrochemistry.
(a) Anodic and cathodic peak potentials plotted versus SCE at various
unstrained, strained, and recovered states of the NiTi alloy. (b)
General plot of the total cohesive energy as a function of lattice spacing
with energy difference E′ in tensile strained state that
facilitates anion insertion. (c) Scheme representing the unstrained,
strained, and recovered states of the NiTi alloy and the transferred strains
on the surface oxide resulting in redox potential shifts. (d)
Potential well representation of the transition between these states for
electrochemical processes with E′ for the strained state
schematically illustrated in panel (b).
Based on these observations, we propose a simple concept to describe this effect that
is illustrated in Fig. 4b. By applying tensile strain to the
nanostructured material, the total free energy of the crystal is above its
equilibrium value as described through relationships between the total cohesive
energy of the crystal and the lattice parameter, such as the universal binding
energy relationship (UBER). As only <0.1% strain is transferred to the
surface oxide even though the alloy undergoes 15% tensile strain, the reversible
effects observed in electrochemical measurements (Fig. 4c)
originate from the changes in the energy landscape of the surface oxide. Since this
process requires the insertion of an anionic species into the host lattice,
accompanied by an oxidation state change in the metal oxide, the increase in free
energy facilitates a smaller energy barrier between the strained metal oxide
(A′) and the inserted state (B) in comparison to the unstrained metaloxide (A) and the inserted state (B). This is visually represented through a
potential well diagram shown in Fig. 4d. This process is
distinguished from that described in electrocatalytic reactions, since effects in
such systems are likely to be minimal until the imposed strain is of a significant
magnitude to modify the electronic band structure of the catalytic material. Even in
the case of applied strain at <0.1%, our results indicate a marked effect of
strain on electrochemical redox reactions relevant to redox-based energy storage
systems that could be a critical tool in the future vision of engineered materials
for advanced energy storage systems. Moreover, the strain can be applied to the
surface oxide and be reversed to varying degrees based on the extent of preloading,
thickness of the surface oxide, and anchoring to the NiTi surface which leads to
isolation of mechano-electrochemical effects of energy storage redox active
materials owing to the fact that the only parameter capable of reversing redox
potential shifts based on this system are the mechanical strains present in the
surface oxides. Also, transformational structural distortions that accompany ion
insertion into metal oxide lattices during electrochemical reactions in
pseudocapacitors and batteries can be studied using the NiTi platform. This would
offer a control knob that can directly tailor energy landscape of existing energy
storage materials.
Conclusion
In summary, we demonstrate the ability to leverage strain engineering to modify the
electrochemical potential of Ni-based metal oxide nanostructures fabricated on the
surface of superelastic/shape memory NiTi materials during
OH− insertion and extraction. With less than 0.1%
strain, we observe shifts in the electrochemical potential up to
~30 mV. Notably, this effect is uniquely correlated with
strain as the reversal of strain in the material (a feature enabled by the
superelastic NiTi) leads to a subsequent recovery of the electrochemical potential
shifts. This elucidates the strain tensor as a six-dimensional framework to modify
the electrochemical response of materials, opens a new area where foundational
principles of electrochemistry (such as the Nernst potential) can intersect
mechanical properties of materials, and provides a practical framework for improving
the function of energy storage materials. As pairing of anodic and cathodic
potentials dictate the total energy density of a battery, strain could potentially
open a route to improve energy storage performance of batteries building from
already existing materials, instead of engaging new synthesis driven routes toward
new materials. Unlike semiconductor manufacturing routes that leverage strain
engineering to modulate electronic properties of materials, we propose
electrochemistry to be more amenable to strain engineering since both the electronic
properties of a material and the physical insertion and storage of ions in a
material are attributes that can be controlled with strain, as we discuss in this
work.
Experimental Methods
Aging of NiTi superelastic wire
NiTi superelastic wires (0.5 mm diameter, 55% Ni from Nitinol Devices
& Components, Inc.) were repeatedly sonicated for 10 min in
Acetone (Aldrich) followed by Ethanol (Aldrich) and then nanopure water
(Millipore water purifier). The wires were dried in air and were subjected to
aging process by heating them to about 600 °C for
1 hour under vacuum with a small controlled flow of air. This led to
the formation of a ~200 nm mixed oxide layer on the
surface of the wires. The aging process was used to perform two functions; the
activation of the superelastic/shapememory capability of the NiTi wire and to
grow a thin oxide layer on the surface of the wire.
Strain setting the surface oxide
The NiTi superelastic wires were subjected to tensile deformation up to 10% and
15% strains at a rate of 2 mm/min using an Instron 5944 mechanical
testing system. The unstrained (0%) and the tensile deformed (10% and 15%) wires
were subjected to sonication treatment for 30 min in 30% peroxide
solution to impart nanotexturing on the oxide surface and to electrochemically
activate the surface oxide layer. The treated wires were rinsed in nanopure
water followed by drying in air.
Differential Scanning Calorimetry
Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC, TA Instruments) was performed on the
unstrained and strained wires to understand the strain recovery property of the
alloy. The unstrained and strained wires were heated from room temperature to
100 °C in the first heating cycle followed by cooling to
−100 °C in the cooling cycle and
equilibrating at these respective temperatures for 5 min in aluminum
pans. The subsequent heating cycle was from
−100 °C to 100 °C
followed by cooling. After two heating and cooling cycles the wires were
equilibrated at room temperature.
Electron Imaging
Characterization of the microstructure and Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy
analysis was performed using a Zeiss Merlin SEM at various magnifications using
5 KV beam voltage for imaging and 20 KV beam voltage for
EDS elemental analysis. Characterization of the nanostructure of the surface
oxide was performed using FEI Tecnai Osiris TEM using a 200 kV S/TEM
system. STEM EDS maps were obtained on an oxide flake scrapped off from the
surface of the NiTi wire to further characterize the composition of the surface
oxide.
Raman and XRD characterization
Raman spectroscopy measurements were carried out using a Reinshaw Raman
microscope using 532 nm Laser excitations. Maps comprising of
800–1000 spots across the surface of the wire was obtained with 60s
exposure time at 10% laser power to yield a statistical strain distribution of
the strained surface oxide layer. Mean peak shift corresponding to various Raman
active modes of the surface oxide was obtained by using Lorrentzian fits on the
obtained spectra. XRD measurements were carried out using a Scintag XGEN 4000
using Cu Kα 1.542 A°. To yield good X-Ray counts,
40 sec exposure times per 0.2 degree increments were maintained
throughout the measurement.
Electrochemical Measurements
Electrochemical measurements were performed using a 3 electrode configuration in
a beaker type cell with the NiTi alloy with surface oxide as the working
electrode, a platinum foil (Alfa Aesar
1 cm × 1 cm) as the
counter electrode and a Saturated Calomel Electrode (SCE) as the reference
electrode. The electrolyte used was a 2 M NaOH solution. Cyclic
voltammograms were obtained for all the unstrained and strained states of the
surface oxides at a scan rate of 100 mV/s in the voltage range of
0 V to 0.5 V. All the samples were cycled for a 100
cycles at 100 mV/s to get reproducible voltammograms. All
electrochemical data was normalized to the immersed area of the wire
electrodes.
Strain Recovery and Analysis
The strain recovery was performed by heating the strained wires with strained
surface oxides to 60 °C in a Quartz CVD tube furnace
under vacuum for 1min. Due to the recovery process the strain imposed on the
wire and the oxide was recovered. The change in the wire length after the
recovery process was used to estimate the strain recovery by the NiTi alloy.
Raman and XRD measurements were performed on the strain recovered to study the
recovered strain state of the surface oxide followed by electrochemical testing
using the same conditions as the unstrained and strained wires.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Muralidharan, N. et al. Strain Engineering to
Modify the Electrochemistry of Energy Storage Electrodes. Sci. Rep.
6, 27542; doi: 10.1038/srep27542 (2016).
Authors: Hong Li; Charlie Tsai; Ai Leen Koh; Lili Cai; Alex W Contryman; Alex H Fragapane; Jiheng Zhao; Hyun Soon Han; Hari C Manoharan; Frank Abild-Pedersen; Jens K Nørskov; Xiaolin Zheng Journal: Nat Mater Date: 2015-11-09 Impact factor: 43.841