Publications by authors named "Leonid Daikhin"

Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) generates surface-acoustic waves in quartz crystal plates that can effectively probe the structure of films, particulate composite electrodes of complex geometry rigidly attached to quartz crystal surface on one side and contacting a gas or liquid phase on the other side. The output QCM-D characteristics consist of the resonance frequency (MHz frequency range) and resonance bandwidth measured with extra-ordinary precision of a few tenths of Hz. Depending on the electrodes stiffness/softness, QCM-D operates either as a gravimetric or complex mechanical probe of their intrinsic structure.

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It is generally accepted that solid-electrolyte interphase formed on the surface of lithium-battery electrodes play a key role in controlling their cycling performance. Although a large variety of surface-sensitive spectroscopies and microscopies were used for their characterization, the focus was on surface species nature rather than on the mechanical properties of the surface films. Here we report a highly sensitive method of gravimetric and viscoelastic probing of the formation of surface films on composite LiTiO electrode coupled with lithium ions intercalation into this electrode.

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Intercalation-induced dimensional changes in a composite battery electrode (comprising a polymeric binder) are one of the major factors limiting electrode cycling performance. Since electrode performance is expressed by the quantities averaged over its entire surface area (e.g.

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Using multiharmonic electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (EQCM-D) monitoring, a new method of characterization of porous solids in contact with liquids has been developed. The dynamic gravimetric information on the growing, dissolving, or stationary stored solid deposits is supplemented by their precise in-operando porous structure characterization on a mesoscopic scale. We present a very powerful method of quartz-crystal admittance modeling of hydrodynamic solid-liquid interactions in order to extract the porous structure parameters of solids during their formation in real time, using different deposition modes.

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A primary atomic-scale effect accompanying Li-ion insertion into rechargeable battery electrodes is a significant intercalation-induced change of the unit cell volume of the crystalline material. This generates a variety of secondary multiscale dimensional changes and causes a deterioration in the energy storage performance stability. Although traditional in situ height-sensing techniques (atomic force microscopy or electrochemical dilatometry) are able to sense electrode thickness changes at a nanometre scale, they are much less informative concerning intercalation-induced changes of the porous electrode structure at a mesoscopic scale.

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Multiharmonic analysis by electrochemical quartz-crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (EQCM-D) is introduced as an excellent tool for quantitative studying electrosorption of ions from aqueous solution in mesoporous (BP-880) or mixed micro-mesoporous (BP-2000) carbon electrodes. Finding the optimal conditions for gravimetric analysis of the ionic content in the charged carbon electrodes, we propose a novel approach to modeling the charge-dependent gravimetric characteristics by incorporation of Gouy-Chapman-Stern electric double layer model for ions electrosorption into meso- and micro-mesoporous carbon electrodes. All three parameters of the gravimetric equation evaluated by fitting it to the experimental mass changes curves were validated using supplementary nitrogen gas sorption analysis and complementing atomic force microscopy.

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Reversible Li-ion intercalation into composite Li-ion battery (LIB) electrodes is often accompanied by significant dimensional electrode changes (deformation) resulting in significant deterioration of the cycling performance. Viscoelastic properties of polymeric binders affected by intercalation-induced deformation of composite LIB electrodes have never been probed in situ on operating electrochemical cells. Here, we introduce a newly developed noninvasive method, namely electrochemical quartz-crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (EQCM-D), for in situ monitoring of elastic properties of polymeric binders during charging of LIB electrodes.

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A new model of quartz-crystal impedance (QCI) of nonuniform layers composed of bumps of carbon particles (either porous or nonporous) and a polymeric binder layer has been proposed. The solid particles are modeled by semispherical and oblate semispheroid bumps embedded into the "sea" of a polymeric binder layer. On the basis of this model and elaborating on the principles of hydrodynamic spectroscopy of composite electrode materials, the geometric and porous structure parameters of nanoporous carbon and nonporous graphite composite electrodes in contact with liquids have been reliably determined.

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We propose a kinetic description of ionic surfactant transfer across an interface between two immiscible electrolyte solutions that includes interfacial processes (charging of the interface, adsorption, and direct ion transfer) as well as characteristics of the electrical circuit. Our model demonstrates that experimentally observed irregular current oscillations may stem from a dynamical instability of the system which is induced by the interplay between a potential-dependent adsorption and direct ionic transfer across the interface. Calculated temporal patterns exhibit dynamical features which agree well with the experimental observations; in particular, we found that current anomalies occur in a vicinity of the standard ion transfer potential, and the presence of the irregular current oscillations depends on the rate and direction of potential scans.

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A theory of electrowetting is developed for systems containing an interface between two immiscible electrolytic solutions. Laws for the dependence of contact angle on electrode potential are presented. Ionic impermeability of the liquid-liquid interface and nonlinear double-layer responses rationalize observed phenomena such as contact-angle saturation and droplet contraction or detachment.

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Electrochemical removal of oxygen and hydrogen from aqueous solution in the vicinity of gold electrodes, with simultaneous measurements of the response of the quartz crystal microbalance, show no evidence of gas nano-bubbles attached to the surface, irrespective of its roughness and hydrophobicity. The contact between gold and frozen electrolyte, which forms a liquid-like layer between them, also does not contain gas bubbles. These statements could be extended to nano-bubbles with characteristic dimensions larger than a few nanometers.

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The effect of surface roughness on the response of the QCM has been considered, both theoretically and experimentally. A new theoretical approach to the description of the effect of roughness on the response of the QCM is proposed that accounts for the multiscale nature of roughness. Performing experiments in liquids having a wide range of viscosity and density made it possible to understand, for the first time, what characteristics of roughness influence the QCM experiments.

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