Ab initio study of the enhancement of lithium-ion transport in in LiBO<sub>2</sub> crystals in presence of lattice vacancies

ORAL

Abstract

Solid-state ionic materials require enhanced ionic conductivity for them to be feasible in solid-state devices such as batteries, fuel cells, and supercapacitors. Here we consider the effect of lattice vacancies in the Li-ion transport; these defects could be produced uniformly through the sample by means of thermal neutron irradiation, e.g., through the boron neutron capture reaction 10B + 1n → 7Li + 4He + 2.79 MeV (see poster session for experimental details [1]). Our density functional theory (DFT) calculations show that B vacancies significantly reduce the activation energy (Em) of Li-ion transport in both monoclinic and tetragonal polymorphs of LBO2 leading to a significant enhancement of the ionic conductivity [2]. In contrast, while O vacancies lower Em in m-LBO, they increase it in t-LBO [2].

References:

1. HM Nguyen, et al., Characterization of Lithium Metaborate (LiBO2) Irradiated with Thermal Neutrons, to be published in J. Mater. Chem. A.

2. C. Ziemke, et al., Formation of lattice vacancies and their effects on lithium-ion transport in LiBO2 crystals: comparative ab initio studies, J. Mater. Chem. A 13, 3146 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1039/D4TA05713A.

*Funded in part by NSF Grant IIP-2044726 and MU Materials Science and Engineering Institute Grant CD002339. We acknowledge the computing infrastructure provided by MU RSS https://doi.org/10.32469/10355/97710.

Publication: C. Ziemke, et al., Formation of lattice vacancies and their effects on lithium-ion transport in LiBO2 crystals: comparative ab initio studies, J. Mater. Chem. A 13, 3146 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1039/D4TA05713A.

Presenters

  • Carlos Wexler

    • University of Missouri

Authors

  • Carlos Wexler

    • University of Missouri
  • Ha M Nguyen

    • University of Missouri
  • Carson D Ziemke

    • University of Missouri
  • Sebastián Amaya-Roncancio

    • Universidad de la Costa
  • John Gahl

    • University of Missouri
  • Yangchuan Xing

    • University of Missouri
  • Thomas W Heitmann

    • University of Missouri