Ca-dimers and solvent layering determine electrochemically active species in Ca(BH4)2 in THF

ORAL

Abstract

Divalent ions, such as Mg, Ca, and Zn, are being considered as competitive, safe, and earth-abundant alternatives to Li-ion electrochemistry. However, the challenge remains to match electrode and electrolyte materials that stably cycle with these new formulations, based primarily on controlling interfacial phenomena. We explore the formation of electroactive species in the electrolyte Ca(BH4)2 in THF through molecular dynamics simulation and continuum modeling. Free-energy analysis indicates that this electrolyte has a majority population of neutral Ca dimers and monomers, albeit with diverse molecular conformations as revealed by unsupervised learning techniques, but with an order of magnitude lower concentration of possibly electroactive charged species, such as the monocation, CaBH4+, which we show is produced via disproportionation of neutral Ca(BH4)2 complexes. Dense layering of THF molecules within 1 nm of the electrode surface (modeled here using graphite) hinders the approach of reducible species to within 0.6 nm and instead enhances the local concentration of species in a narrow intermediate-density layer from 0.7-0.9 nm. A dramatic increase in the population of charged species within 1 nm of the electrode is induced at negative bias, supplied by local dimer disproportionation, if the concentration is sufficiently high. The consequences for performance and alternative formulations are discussed in light of this molecular-scale insight.

* This work was fully supported by 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. The theoretical analysis in this work was supported by a User Project at The Molecular Foundry and its computing resources, managed by the High Performance Computing Services Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), supported by the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the United States Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC02-05CH11231.

Publication: Ca-dimers and solvent layering determine electrochemically active species in Ca(BH4)2 in THF (submitted).

Presenters

  • David Prendergast

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Authors

  • David Prendergast

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Ana Sanz Matias

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Fabrice Roncoroni

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Siddharth Sundararaman

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory