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Featured researches published by Aaron M. Chockla.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Silicon Nanowire Fabric as a Lithium Ion Battery Electrode Material

Aaron M. Chockla; Justin T. Harris; Vahid A. Akhavan; Timothy D. Bogart; Vincent C. Holmberg; Chet Steinhagen; C. Buddie Mullins; Keith J. Stevenson; Brian A. Korgel

A nonwoven fabric with paperlike qualities composed of silicon nanowires is reported. The nanowires, made by the supercritical-fluid-liquid-solid process, are crystalline, range in diameter from 10 to 50 nm with an average length of >100 μm, and are coated with a thin chemisorbed polyphenylsilane shell. About 90% of the nanowire fabric volume is void space. Thermal annealing of the nanowire fabric in a reducing environment converts the polyphenylsilane coating to a carbonaceous layer that significantly increases the electrical conductivity of the material. This makes the nanowire fabric useful as a self-supporting, mechanically flexible, high-energy-storage anode material in a lithium ion battery. Anode capacities of more than 800 mA h g(-1) were achieved without the addition of conductive carbon or binder.


ACS Nano | 2013

Nanostructured Si(1-x)Gex for Tunable Thin Film Lithium-Ion Battery Anodes

Paul R. Abel; Aaron M. Chockla; Yong-Mao Lin; Vincent C. Holmberg; Justin T. Harris; Brian A. Korgel; Adam Heller; C. Buddie Mullins

Both silicon and germanium are leading candidates to replace the carbon anode of lithium ions batteries. Silicon is attractive because of its high lithium storage capacity while germanium, a superior electronic and ionic conductor, can support much higher charge/discharge rates. Here we investigate the electronic, electrochemical and optical properties of Si(1-x)Gex thin films with x = 0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, and 1. Glancing angle deposition provided amorphous films of reproducible nanostructure and porosity. The films composition and physical properties were investigated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, four-point probe conductivity, Raman, and UV-vis absorption spectroscopy. The films were assembled into coin cells to test their electrochemical properties as a lithium-ion battery anode material. The cells were cycled at various C-rates to determine the upper limits for high rate performance. Adjusting the composition in the Si(1-x)Gex system demonstrates a trade-off between rate capability and specific capacity. We show that high-capacity silicon anodes and high-rate germanium anodes are merely the two extremes; the composition of Si(1-x)Gex alloys provides a new parameter to use in electrode optimization.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Effects of pH on protein–protein interactions and implications for protein phase behavior

André C. Dumetz; Aaron M. Chockla; Eric W. Kaler; Abraham M. Lenhoff

The effects of pH on protein interactions and protein phase behavior were investigated by measuring the reduced second osmotic virial coefficient (b2) for ovalbumin and catalase, and the aggregate and crystal solubilities for ovalbumin, beta-lactoglobulin A and B, ribonuclease A and lysozyme. The b2 trends observed for ovalbumin and catalase show that protein interactions become increasingly attractive with decreasing pH. This trend is in good agreement with ovalbumin phase behavior, which was observed to evolve progressively with decreasing pH, leading to formation of amorphous aggregates instead of gel bead-like aggregates, and spherulites instead of needle-like crystals. For both acidic and basic proteins, the aggregate solubility during protein salting-out decreased with decreasing pH, and contrary to what is commonly believed, neither aggregate nor crystal solubility had a minimum at the isoelectric point. beta-Lactoglobulin B was the only protein investigated to show salting-in behavior, and crystals were obtained at low salt concentrations in the vicinity of its isoelectric point. The physical origin of the different trends observed during protein salting-in and salting-out is discussed, and the implications for protein crystallization are emphasized.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Protein Phase Behavior in Aqueous Solutions: Crystallization, Liquid-Liquid Phase Separation, Gels, and Aggregates

André C. Dumetz; Aaron M. Chockla; Eric W. Kaler; Abraham M. Lenhoff


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2012

Solution-Grown Germanium Nanowire Anodes for Lithium-Ion Batteries

Aaron M. Chockla; Kyle C. Klavetter; C. Buddie Mullins; Brian A. Korgel


Chemistry of Materials | 2012

Tin-Seeded Silicon Nanowires for High Capacity Li-Ion Batteries

Aaron M. Chockla; Kyle C. Klavetter; C. Buddie Mullins; Brian A. Korgel


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Electrochemical Lithiation of Graphene-Supported Silicon and Germanium for Rechargeable Batteries

Aaron M. Chockla; Matthew G. Panthani; Vincent C. Holmberg; Colin M. Hessel; Dariya K. Reid; Timothy D. Bogart; Justin T. Harris; C. Buddie Mullins; Brian A. Korgel


Journal of Power Sources | 2013

A high-rate germanium-particle slurry cast Li-ion anode with high Coulombic efficiency and long cycle life

Kyle C. Klavetter; Sean M. Wood; Yong Mao Lin; Jonathan L. Snider; Nicholas C. Davy; Aaron M. Chockla; Dwight Romanovicz; Brian A. Korgel; Joo Woon Lee; Adam Heller; C. Buddie Mullins


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Influences of Gold, Binder and Electrolyte on Silicon Nanowire Performance in Li-Ion Batteries

Aaron M. Chockla; Timothy D. Bogart; Colin M. Hessel; Kyle C. Klavetter; C. Buddie Mullins; Brian A. Korgel


Chemistry of Materials | 2011

Colloidal Synthesis of Germanium Nanorods

Aaron M. Chockla; Justin T. Harris; Brian A. Korgel

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Brian A. Korgel

University of Texas at Austin

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C. Buddie Mullins

University of Texas at Austin

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Justin T. Harris

University of Texas at Austin

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Timothy D. Bogart

University of Texas at Austin

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Vincent C. Holmberg

University of Texas at Austin

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Kyle C. Klavetter

University of Texas at Austin

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