MRS Meetings and Events

 

ES03.09.05 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Assessing Correlations between Phonon Features and Migration Barriers in Multivalent Solid Electrolytes

When and Where

Apr 25, 2024
11:15am - 11:30am

Room 423, Level 4, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Samuel Greene1,Donald Siegel1

The University of Texas at Austin1

Abstract

Samuel Greene1,Donald Siegel1

The University of Texas at Austin1
Solid ion conductors with high ionic conductivity can enable the development of solid-state batteries with improved safety and performance. Most materials exhibit insufficient conductivity for commercial applications, particularly for multivalent ions. High-throughput computational approaches, which involve screening large databases of compounds, can accelerate the discovery of new materials with sufficient conductivity. Directly calculating ionic conductivity from first principles is expensive and difficult to automate, which renders such calculations incompatible with screening approaches. Previously, others have proposed the phonon band center (mean phonon frequency) as a metric that is easier to calculate and measure, and they have demonstrated that it is correlated with the energetic barrier for ion migration in lithium and sodium conductors. I will discuss our efforts to extend this approach to investigate magnesium, calcium, and zinc conductors using first-principles calculations of phonon features. In addition to frequencies, we consider the directions of phonon modes as predictors for migration barriers. We compare our results with previous trends for monovalent conductors.

Keywords

diffusion

Symposium Organizers

Pieremanuele Canepa, University of Houston
Robert Sacci, Oak Ridge National Lab
Howard Qingsong Tu, Rochester Institute of Technology
Yan Yao, University of Houston

Symposium Support

Gold
Neware Technology LLC

Bronze
Toyota Motor Engineering and Manufacturing North America

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature