chemical diffusion coefficient
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

130
(FIVE YEARS 5)

H-INDEX

23
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 1380-1391
Author(s):  
Kerstin Neuhaus ◽  
Christina Schmidt ◽  
Liudmila Fischer ◽  
Wilhelm Albert Meulenberg ◽  
Ke Ran ◽  
...  

In this study, a dual phase composite (CSO-FC2O) consisting of 60 vol % Ce0.8Sm0.2O1.9 as oxygen-conductive phase and 40 vol % FeCo2O4 as electron-conductive phase was synthesized. TEM measurements showed a relatively pure dual-phase material with only minor amounts of a tertiary (Sm,Ce)(Fe,Co)O3 perovskite phase and isolated residues of a rock salt phase at the grain boundaries. The obtained material was used as a model to demonstrate that a combination of polarization relaxation measurements and Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM)-based mapping of the Volta potential before and after the end of polarization can be used to determine the chemical diffusion coefficient of the ceria component of the composite. The KPFM measurements were performed at room temperature and show diffusion coefficients in the range of 3 × 10−13 cm2·s−1, which is comparable to values measured for single-phase Gd-doped ceria thin films using the same method.


2021 ◽  
Vol 168 (12) ◽  
pp. 120504
Author(s):  
Stephen Dongmin Kang ◽  
William C. Chueh

The galvanostatic intermittent titration technique (GITT), introduced in 1977 by Weppner and Huggins, provided a readily accessible means to measuring the chemical diffusion coefficient of electrochemical electrode materials. The method continues to be widely used today, but the reported diffusivity values are highly inconsistent, ranging as much as four orders of magnitude for some Li layered oxide compositions. Even qualitative trends of diffusivity are inconsistent, suggesting significant flaws in the implementation of the method. Other variants of the GITT method also suffer from similar inconsistency problems. Here we identify numerous sources of significant error including composition-dependent reaction overpotentials, mathematical flaws in the relaxation analysis methods, finite-size and non-planar geometry effects, inter-particle inhomogeneity issues, early transient effects, and surface area uncertainties. We propose a simple relaxation analysis scheme using the time variable t relax + τ − t relax , where t relax is relaxation time and τ is the galvanostatic pulse duration. We also propose to use dense diffusion-limited samples to isolate the bulk-diffusion process in the time domain. Chemical diffusivity can be extracted much more reliably with this improved implementation of the GITT method.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian Badur ◽  
Diemo Renz ◽  
Marvin Cronau ◽  
Thomas Göddenhenrich ◽  
Dirk Dietzel ◽  
...  

AbstractElectrochemical strain microscopy (ESM) has been developed with the aim of measuring Vegard strains in mixed ionic-electronic conductors (MIECs), such as electrode materials for Li-ion batteries, caused by local changes in the chemical composition. In this technique, a voltage-biased AFM tip is used in contact resonance mode. However, extracting quantitative strain information from ESM experiments is highly challenging due to the complexity of the signal generation process. In particular, electrostatic interactions between tip and sample contribute significantly to the measured ESM signals, and the separation of Vegard strain-induced signal contributions from electrostatically induced signal contributions is by no means a trivial task. Recently, we have published a compensation method for eliminating frequency-independent electrostatic contributions in ESM measurements. Here, we demonstrate the potential of this method for detecting Vegard strain in MIECs by choosing Cu$$_2$$ 2 Mo$$_6$$ 6 S$$_8$$ 8 as a model-type MIEC with an exceptionally high Cu chemical diffusion coefficient. Even for this material, Vegard strains are only measurable around and above room-temperature and with proper elimination of electrostatics. The analyis of the measured Vegards strains gives strong indication that due to a high charge transfer resistance at the tip/interface, the local Cu concentration variations are much smaller than predicted by the local Nernst equation. This suggests that charge transfer resistances have to be analyzed in more detail in future ESM studies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 1895-1914
Author(s):  
Linlin Meng ◽  
Wen-Qing Xu ◽  
Shu Wang

Abstract We study the boundary layer problem of a Keller-Segel model in a domain of two space dimensions with vanishing chemical diffusion coefficient. By using the method of matched asymptotic expansions of singular perturbation theory, we construct an accurate approximate solution which incorporates the effects of boundary layers and then use the classical energy estimates to prove the structural stability of the approximate solution as the chemical diffusion coefficient tends to zero.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (17) ◽  
pp. 3588 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilhelm Pfleging ◽  
Petronela Gotcu

Quantitative experiments of lithiation/delithiation rates were considered for a better understanding of electrochemical intercalation/deintercalation processes in laser structured thick film cathodes. Besides galvanostatic cycling for evaluation of specific discharge capacities, a suitable quantitative approach for determining the rate of Li-ion insertion in the active material and the rate of Li-ion transport in the electrolyte is expressed by chemical diffusion coefficient values. For this purpose, the galvanostatic intermittent titration technique has been involved. It could be shown that laser structured electrodes provide an enhanced chemical diffusion coefficient and an improved capacity retention at high charging and discharging rates.


2018 ◽  
Vol 383 ◽  
pp. 147-152
Author(s):  
Misha Sinder ◽  
Jian Min Shi ◽  
Klaus Dieter Becker

The model explaining the occurrence of the electron concentration step front during oxidation of nitrogen-doped TiO2-δ thin films is presented. This model is based on ambipolar chemical diffusion coefficient analysis, for which immobile and uniformly distributed nitrogen component is assumed. The diffusion species and oxygen activity (pressure) profiles are obtained by numerical and approximate analytical simulation of the chemical diffusion. The profiles indicate the presence of two separate singularities: the electron concentration step front, and the electron-hole recombination reaction front. The electron concentration step front relates to the singularity of the ambipolar diffusion of three types of charged species with essentially different diffusion coefficients.


2018 ◽  
Vol 383 ◽  
pp. 153-158
Author(s):  
Misha Sinder

This is a theoretical study of species profiles during the oxygen chemical diffusion in an acceptor doped oxide crystal driven by large changes in the ambient oxygen partial pressure. The oxide crystal containing three species: mobile oxygen vacancy, mobile electron, immobile dopant ion, is considered. Our analysis is based on the expression of the chemical diffusion coefficient obtained in the framework of the concept of conservative ensembles (Maier J., 1993). It is shown that the dependence of chemical diffusion coefficient on ambient oxygen partial pressure in double-logarithmic coordinates is divided into distinct intervals. For each pressure interval the chemical diffusion equation is reduced to the diffusion equation with a diffusion coefficient which exhibits a power dependence on concentration. First, we analyzed the chemical diffusion under pressure inside each interval. As a result two singularities on the species diffusion profiles can be found: an internal reaction diffusion front, and an ambipolar diffusion front. This ambipolar diffusion front is characterized by a step of the electron concentration, moving inside a specimen. Afterwards, we consider a crystal in which the range of partial pressure spans all considered pressure intervals.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document