Members of NEES Gather for 2015 Spring Accomplishment Meeting

Members of NEES Gather for 2015 Spring Accomplishment Meeting

Members of NEES Gather for 2015 Spring Accomplishment Meeting


The members of the Nanostructures for Electrical Energy Storage, a DOE Energy Frontier Research Center, took some time out from discussing problems in nanoscale physics, chemistry, material composition and battery construction to enjoy a hike in the Rocky Mountains near Salt Lake City.

The group met to showcase accomplishments, share progress and determine useful directions in nanoscale electrical energy storage at Snowbird Resort, Utah. As well as enjoying the Rockies on a hike on the last day of the meeting, the group seriously delved into the problems of degradation of battery components, mesoarchitectures and their science, and solid-state battery issues.

John Hemminger, of the University of California, Irvine, the chair of the External Advisory Board that leads the group's direction, kicked off the meeting with an investigation into an issue in interface science,"Probing Molecular Solvation and Chemistry at the Liquid/Vapor Interface of Aqueous Solutions via XPS of Liquid‐Jets and MD Simulations." Hemminger‘s group uses synchrotrons at LBL and in Berlin to vary the strength of x-rays to penetrate different depths of an aqueous solution just at the point that it turns to vapor, in order to discover underlying details of each depth's chemistry and composition.

The group visited three topics in depth during the retreat: Tortuosity & Ionics on Mesoporous Architecture, Nanostructure Degradation, and Solid State Storage & Interphases. For each of these Special Sessions, the moderator introduced the topic under discussion with a brief background overview and two 15-min technical research presentations given by either the graduate students or principal investigators. The strength of the NEES EFRC is that its members, though distributed all over the country, can come together to compare notes and exchange techniques and ideas.

Left to right: Nam Kim, Wentao Song, Chuan-Fu Sun, John Cumings, Tetyana Ignatova, Kevin Zavadil, Glen Merfeld, Tim PLett, Kamen Nechev, Tom Greszler, Mark Reed, Henry White, Keith Gregorczyk, Xin Li, Martin Edwards, Alec Talin, Janice Reutt-Robey, Jeremy Ticey, Bryan Eichhorn, Malachi Noked, Alex Kozen, Phil Collins, Nick Ware

 

Four graduate students new to the NEES project gave presentations in their research specialty that contributes significantly toward NEES' overall goals in its second phase. Two NEES PIs from Sandia National Laboratories on Solid State Energy Storage wrapped up the workshop.

Eleanor Gillette (UMD) "Controlled 3D Porous Nanostructures: Challenges and Opportunities for Mesoscale Electrochemistry"
Tim Plett (UCI) "Direct Measurement of Ionic Conductivity by Way of Nanoconfinement"
Mya Le Thai (UCI): "In Situ Electrical Conductivity as a Function of X and Size"
Wentao Song (UMD) "Early-stage SEI Formation: Probing Molecular Carbonate Decomposition Pathways and Artificial Ethylene EDC Monolayers"
PI Speaker A. Alec Taliin (SNL-CA) "The Challenge of 3D All Solid State Li-ion Battery"
PI Speaker Kevin Leung (SNL-NM) "What is "Voltage" in Solid-film-coated Battery Electrodes at Atomic Lengthscales and Why We Care"

New and emerging scientists also showcased their latest work at a poster session, and three posters out of the thirty presented were honored:

Utilizing Chemical State Mapping to Reveal Spatially Distributed Dynamics in Model Nanostructured Battery Electrodes
Alex Pearse, Eleanor Gillette, Sang Bok Lee, Gary Rubloff
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
University of Maryland, College Park

Application Of Scatterometry For Degradation Study of Li-Ion Battery Electrodes in Periodic Array
S. Chu, K. Gerasopoulos, C.-F. Lin, H. Jung, A. Alec Talin, G.W. Rubloff, and R. Ghodssi
MEMS Sensors and Actuators Laboratory
Institute for Systems Research
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
University of Maryland, College Park
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA

Thin-Film Lithiation Phase Progression Observed in a TEM Liquid Cell
Andrew J. Leenheer, Katherine L. Jungjohann, Kevin R. Zavadil, C. Thomas Harris
Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM

May 27, 2015


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