Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Kimberly E. Lundberg"'
Publikováno v:
ECS Meeting Abstracts. :1956-1956
Rechargeable lithium-ion batteries have been widely commercialized in portable electronics. However, adoption of lithium-ion batteries in more demanding applications such as electric vehicles and renewable energy storage has been hindered by capacity
Autor:
Andrew A Gewirth, Kimberly E. Lundberg
Publikováno v:
ECS Meeting Abstracts. :1955-1955
Mechanical deformation in battery electrodes incites degradation and capacity loss by causing cracks in the active material, electrical isolation of particles from the current collector, and additional surface area available for electrolyte decomposi
Autor:
Timothy T Fister, Sang-Don Han, Soojeong Kim, John T. Vaughey, Aude A. Hubaud, Paul Fenter, Jennifer Esbenshade, Kimberly E. Lundberg, Andrew A Gewirth
Publikováno v:
ECS Meeting Abstracts. :388-388
A multivalent successor to lithium ion batteries will likely incorporate a metal anode. However, many electrodeposition processes are prone to energy losses from side reactions and overpotentials for plating or stripping. To develop a link between th
Publikováno v:
ECS Meeting Abstracts. :532-532
LiMn2O4 (LMO) is a promising cathode material for Li ion batteries due to its high voltage, environmental benignity, and natural abundance.1,2 Currently, LMO suffers from capacity fade due to Mn ion dissolution and a Jahn-Teller distortion which redu
Autor:
Timothy T Fister, Jae Jin Kim, Guennady Evmenenko, Donald Bruce Buchholz, Xiao Chen, Michael J. Bedzyk, Fernando Castro, Jinsong Wu, Vinayak Dravid, Jennifer Esbenshade, Kimberly E. Lundberg, Andrew A. Gewirth, Handan Yildirim, Jeff Greeley, Paul Fenter
Publikováno v:
ECS Meeting Abstracts. :30-30
The capacity of most battery insertion reactions is limited by the number of open lithium sites in electrode’s crystal structure, usually reaching one per metal atom. Conversion reactions, where the metal oxygen bond is broken to form clusters of L
Autor:
Elissa M. Grzincic, Kenneth S. Suslick, Kimberly E. Lundberg, Catherine J. Murphy, Jacqueline M. Rankin, Nitin K. Neelakantan
Publikováno v:
Advanced Science
Silicone microspheres are exceedingly difficult to make. Here, polydimethylsiloxane microspheres (≈1 μm diameter) are synthesized using ultrasonic spray pyrolysis, the first demonstration of a scalable synthetic procedure for crosslinked silicone