Multi-faceted characterization of battery reactions: the case of spinel hosts for Mg-ion batteries

COFFEE_KLATCH  · Invited

Abstract

Electrochemical energy storage was an important enabler of the wireless revolution and it is touted as a key component of a society that shifts away from its dependence on fossil fuels. Batteries are the primary technology when high energy devices are required. They are complex reactors in which multiple physico-chemical phenomena are concurrent in time and space. As a result, it is increasingly clear that holistic approaches to define such phenomena require a breadth of characterization tools. I will exemplify this need in the context of our quest for hosts that are able to reversibly intercalate Mg$^{2+}$ ions. Systems based on the intercalation of multivalent ions are pushed as next generation devices because, while they can resemble systems using Li$^{+}$ ions, they can store more charge per mol of intercalated species, and adopt metals as the anode. Using a combination of characterization tools, including X-ray diffraction, spectroscopy and scattering, electron microscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance, we ascertained that spinel oxides are able to reversibly and extensively accommodate Mg$^{2+}$. The mechanisms of this reaction were also elucidated. The rationale for the choice of techniques and the key pieces they provided to complete the picture will be discussed.

*This work was supported as part of the Joint Center for Energy Storage Research (JCESR), an Energy Innovation Hub funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences.

Authors

  • Jordi Cabana

    • University of Illinois at Chicago