Publications by authors named "Anja Kopac Lautar"

Insights into the electrochemical processes occurring at the electrode-electrolyte interface are a crucial step in most electrochemistry domains and in particular in the optimization of the battery technology. However, studying potential-dependent processes at the interface is one of the biggest challenges, both for theoreticians and experimentalists. The challenge is pushed further when stable species also depend on the concentration of specific ligands in the electrolyte, such as chlorides.

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This paper presents a grand canonical formalism to treat electrochemical effects at interfaces. This general formalism is linked with the classical chemical hydrogen electrode (CHE) approximation and an improved approximation is proposed. This new approximation including a higher order correction that (i) keeps the low computational cost of classical CHE approach, (ii) does not require to know the type of reaction (electrochemical/not electrochemical) and (iii) should give better estimates in many problematic cases.

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The redox reaction mechanism of a poly(phenanthrene quinone)/graphene composite (PFQ/rGO) was investigated using operando attenuated total reflection infrared (ATR-IR) spectroscopy during cycling of Li and Mg batteries. The reference phenanthrene quinone and the Li and Mg salts of the hydroquinone monomers were synthesized and their IR spectra were measured. Additionally, IR spectra were calculated using DFT.

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The electrochemical degradation of two solvent-based electrolytes for Mg-metal batteries is investigated through a grand canonical density functional theory (DFT) approach. Both electrolytes are highly reactive in the double layer region where the solvated species have no direct contact with the Mg-surface, hence emphasizing that surface reactions are not the only phenomena responsible for electrolyte degradation. Applied to dimethoxyethane (DME) and ethylene carbonate (EC), the present methodology shows that both solvents should thermodynamically decompose in the double layer prior to the Mg/Mg reduction, leading to electrochemically inactive reaction products.

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One of the crucial steps for the development of batteries is understanding the interface stability and morphological changes occurring during continuous stripping and deposition. In order to investigate the dependence of morphology evolution on surface orientation, we examine the energetics and growth mechanism on magnesium (0001), (101[combining macron]0), (101[combining macron]1), (112[combining macron]0) and (112[combining macron]1) surface orientations using density functional theory and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. Workfunctions, surface, adsorption and interaction energies, diffusion barriers and k-rates for diffusion via hopping and exchange mechanisms are studied.

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Article Synopsis
  • Organic materials are gaining popularity as sustainable electrode materials for future batteries, but their electrochemical mechanisms are not well-studied due to a lack of effective analytical techniques.
  • A new in operando attenuated total reflectance infrared spectroscopy method has been developed to monitor infrared-active band changes during reduction/oxidation in lithium batteries.
  • This method has been applied to analyze various organic polymers and specifically investigates the redox reaction of poly(anthraquinonyl sulfide) in magnesium batteries, revealing a mechanism involving the reduction of carbonyl bonds.
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