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The Nature of Interface Interactions Leading to High Ionic Conductivity in LiBH 4 /SiO 2 Nanocomposites.

Sander F H LambregtsErnst R H van EckPeter NgeneArno P M Kentgens
Published in: ACS applied energy materials (2022)
Complex metal hydride/oxide nanocomposites are a promising class of solid-state electrolytes. They exhibit high ionic conductivities due to an interaction of the metal hydride with the surface of the oxide. The exact nature of this interaction and composition of the hydride/oxide interface is not yet known. Using 1 H, 7 Li, 11 B, and 29 Si NMR spectroscopy and lithium borohydride confined in nanoporous silica as a model system, we now elucidate the chemistry and dynamics occurring at the interface between the scaffold and the complex metal hydride. We observed that the structure of the oxide scaffold has a significant effect on the ionic conductivity. A previously unknown silicon site was observed in the nanocomposites and correlated to the LiBH 4 at the interface with silica. We provide a model for the origin of this silicon site which reveals that siloxane bonds are broken and highly dynamic silicon-hydride-borohydride and silicon-oxide-lithium bonds are formed at the interface between LiBH 4 and silica. Additionally, we discovered a strong correlation between the thickness of the silica pore walls and the fraction of the LiBH 4 that displays fast dynamics. Our findings provide insights on the role of the local scaffold structure and the chemistry of the interaction at the interface between complex metal hydrides and oxide hosts. These findings are relevant for other complex hydride/metal oxide systems where interface effects leads to a high ionic conductivity.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • ionic liquid
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • tissue engineering
  • carbon nanotubes
  • density functional theory