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Active HORIZON European Commission

CAPTURING ULTRAFAST ELECTRON AND ION DYNAMICS IN BATTERIES

€5M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Danmarks Tekniske Universitet
Country Denmark
Start Date Sep 01, 2023
End Date Aug 31, 2027
Duration 1,460 days
Number of Grantees 6
Roles Participant; Coordinator; Third Party
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101103873
Grant Description

Batteries are attractive candidates for lightweight, high capacity, mobile energy storage solutions.

Despite decades of research, a persistent fundamental knowledge gap prevents batteries from fulfilling their potential, because the atomistic mechanisms of charge and ion transfer across interfaces in batteries remain largely unexplored by experimental techniques. When charges move, the local arrangement of atoms changes in response to the new electronic configuration.

How these changes occur has a significant impact on how efficiently and how far the charges can move, yet the time and length scales are still poorly understood.

Conventional experimental probes used in battery research cannot provide the needed ultrafast time and atomic length scale resolution, nor sensitivity to changes in electronic configuration around specific atomic species.

Hence, it is currently challenging to unravel the dynamic rearrangement of atoms and ions which accompany electron transfer, and in turn govern the charge transfer processes.UltraBat will close this knowledge gap by pushing further the latest development of ultra-bright and ultra-fast X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL) scattering and spectroscopy techniques together with visible ultrafast spectroscopy to study charge transfer between different redox centres in Li-rich layered intercalation compounds and at the solid/liquid interface.

Advances in NMR spectroscopy will reveal local ordering and lithium interfacial dynamics on the nanometer scale.

Coupled with predictions of experimental observables from a new framework for atomic-scale simulations of the electrochemical interface and transport mechanisms, we will reveal phenomena driving diffusion of ions in complex electrode materials.

This will provide the insight required for transformational approaches to control the redox reactions (e.g. electron transfer) that are common to many energy-related processes, including batteries, photovoltaics, and water-splitting systems.

All Grantees

College de France; Danmarks Tekniske Universitet; Universite D'Orleans; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique CNRS; European X-Ray Free-Electron Laserfacility Gmbh; Sorbonne Universite

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