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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin E. Wilson is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin E. Wilson.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Control of TiO2 grain size and positioning in three-dimensionally ordered macroporous TiO2/C composite anodes for lithium ion batteries.

Nicholas D. Petkovich; Stephen G. Rudisill; Benjamin E. Wilson; Anwesha Mukherjee; Andreas Stein

After several high-profile incidents that raised concerns about the hazards posed by lithium ion batteries, research has accelerated in the development of safer electrodes and electrolytes. One anode material, titanium dioxide (TiO2), offers a distinct safety advantage in comparison to commercialized graphite anodes, since TiO2 has a higher potential for lithium intercalation. In this article, we present two routes for the facile, robust synthesis of nanostructured TiO2/carbon composites for use as lithium ion battery anodes. These materials are made using a combination of colloidal crystal templating and surfactant templating, leading to the first report of a three-dimensionally ordered macroporous TiO2/C composite with mesoporous walls. Control over the size and location of the TiO2 crystallites in the composite (an often difficult task) has been achieved by changing the chelating agent in the precursor. Adjustment of the pyrolysis temperature has also allowed us to strike a balance between the size of the TiO2 crystallites and the degree of carbonization. Using these pathways to optimize electrochemical performance, the primarily macroporous TiO2/C composites can attain a capacity of 171 mAh/g at a rate of 1 C. Additionally, the carbon in these composites can function as a secondary template for high-surface-area, macroporous TiO2 with disordered mesoporous voids. Combining the advantages of a nanocrystalline framework and significant open porosity, the macroporous TiO2 delivers a stable capacity (>170 mAh/g at a rate of C/2) over 100 cycles.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Ionic Liquids as Electrolytes for Electrochemical Double-Layer Capacitors: Structures that Optimize Specific Energy

Maral P. S. Mousavi; Benjamin E. Wilson; Sadra Kashefolgheta; Evan L. Anderson; Siyao He; Philippe Bühlmann; Andreas Stein

Key parameters that influence the specific energy of electrochemical double-layer capacitors (EDLCs) are the double-layer capacitance and the operating potential of the cell. The operating potential of the cell is generally limited by the electrochemical window of the electrolyte solution, that is, the range of applied voltages within which the electrolyte or solvent is not reduced or oxidized. Ionic liquids are of interest as electrolytes for EDLCs because they offer relatively wide potential windows. Here, we provide a systematic study of the influence of the physical properties of ionic liquid electrolytes on the electrochemical stability and electrochemical performance (double-layer capacitance, specific energy) of EDLCs that employ a mesoporous carbon model electrode with uniform, highly interconnected mesopores (3DOm carbon). Several ionic liquids with structurally diverse anions (tetrafluoroborate, trifluoromethanesulfonate, trifluoromethanesulfonimide) and cations (imidazolium, ammonium, pyridinium, piperidinium, and pyrrolidinium) were investigated. We show that the cation size has a significant effect on the electrolyte viscosity and conductivity, as well as the capacitance of EDLCs. Imidazolium- and pyridinium-based ionic liquids provide the highest cell capacitance, and ammonium-based ionic liquids offer potential windows much larger than imidazolium and pyridinium ionic liquids. Increasing the chain length of the alkyl substituents in 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium trifluoromethanesulfonimide does not widen the potential window of the ionic liquid. We identified the ionic liquids that maximize the specific energies of EDLCs through the combined effects of their potential windows and the double-layer capacitance. The highest specific energies are obtained with ionic liquid electrolytes that possess moderate electrochemical stability, small ionic volumes, low viscosity, and hence high conductivity, the best performing ionic liquid tested being 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Y-doped Li8ZrO6: A Li-Ion Battery Cathode Material with High Capacity

Shuping Huang; Benjamin E. Wilson; Bo Wang; Yuan Fang; Keegan Buffington; Andreas Stein; Donald G. Truhlar

We study--experimentally and theoretically--the energetics, structural changes, and charge flows during the charging and discharging processes for a new high-capacity cathode material, Li8ZrO6 (LZO), which we study both pure and yttrium-doped. We quantum mechanically calculated the stable delithiated configurations, the delithiation energy, the charge flow during delithiation, and the stability of the delithiated materials. We find that Li atoms are easier to extract from tetrahedral sites than octahedral ones. We calculate a large average voltage of 4.04 eV vs Li/Li(+) for delithiation of the first Li atom in a primitive cell, which is confirmed by galvanostatic charge/discharge cycling data. Energy calculations indicate that topotactic delithiation is kinetically favored over decomposition into Li, ZrO2, and O2 during the charging process, although the thermodynamic energy of the topotactic reaction is less favorable. When one or two lithium atoms are extracted from a primitive cell of LZO, its volume and structure change little, whereas extraction of the third lithium greatly distorts the layered structure. The Li6ZrO6 and Li5ZrO6 delithiation products can be thermodynamically metastable to release of O2. Experimentally, materials with sufficiently small particle size for efficient delithiation and relithiation were achieved within an yttrium-doped LZO/carbon composite cathode that exhibited an initial discharge capacity of at least 200 mAh/g over the first 10 cycles, with 142 mAh/g maintained after 60 cycles. Computations predict that during the charging process, the oxygen ion near the Li vacancy is oxidized for both pure LZO and yttrium-doped LZO, which leads to a small-polaron hole.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Titania–Carbon Nanocomposite Anodes for Lithium Ion Batteries— Effects of Confined Growth and Phase Synergism

Nicholas D. Petkovich; Benjamin E. Wilson; Stephen G. Rudisill; Andreas Stein

As lithium-ion batteries (LIB) see increasing use in areas beyond consumer electronics, such as the transportation sector, research has been directed at improving LIBs to better suit these applications. Of particular interest are materials and methods to increase Li(+) capacity at various charge/discharge rates, to improve retention of Li(+) capacity from cycle-to-cycle, and to enhance various safety aspects of electrode synthesis, cell construction, and end use. This work focuses on the synthesis and testing of three-dimensionally ordered macroporous (3DOM) TiO2/C LIB anode materials prepared using low toxicity precursors, including ammonium citratoperoxotitanate(IV) and sucrose, which provide high capacities for reversible Li(+) insertion/extraction. When the composites are pyrolyzed at 700 °C, the carbon phase restricts sintering of TiO2 crystallites and keeps the size of these crystallites below 5 nm. Slightly larger crystallites are produced at higher temperatures, alongside a titanium oxycarbide phase. The composites exhibit excellent capacities as LIB anodes at low to moderate charge/discharge rates (in the window from 1 to 3 V vs Li/Li(+)). Composites pyrolyzed at 700 °C retain over 200 mAh/g TiO2 of capacity after 100 cycles at a C/2 rate (C = 335 mA/g), and do not suffer from extensive cycle-to-cycle capacity fading. A substantial improvement of overall capacities, especially at high rates, is attained by cycling the composite anodes in a wider voltage window (0.05 to 3 V vs Li/Li(+)), which allows for Li(+) intercalation into carbon. At currents of 1500 mA/g of active material, over 200 mAh/g of capacity is retained. Other structural aspects of the composites are discussed, including how rutile TiO2 is found in these composites at sizes below the thermodynamic stability limit in the pure phase.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2013

Design and functionality of colloidal-crystal-templated materials--chemical applications of inverse opals.

Andreas Stein; Benjamin E. Wilson; Stephen G. Rudisill


Journal of Power Sources | 2015

Utilizing ionic liquids for controlled N-doping in hard-templated, mesoporous carbon electrodes for high-performance electrochemical double-layer capacitors

Benjamin E. Wilson; Siyao He; Keegan Buffington; Stephen G. Rudisill; William H. Smyrl; Andreas Stein


Chemistry of Materials | 2016

Transition-Metal-Doped M-Li8ZrO6 (M = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Ce) as High-Specific-Capacity Li-Ion Battery Cathode Materials: Synthesis, Electrochemistry, and Quantum Mechanical Characterization

Shuping Huang; Benjamin E. Wilson; William H. Smyrl; Donald G. Truhlar; Andreas Stein


Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2015

Unbiased Quantification of the Electrochemical Stability Limits of Electrolytes and Ionic Liquids

Maral P. S. Mousavi; Adam J. Dittmer; Benjamin E. Wilson; Jinbo Hu; Andreas Stein; Philippe Bühlmann


Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2014

Design of a Low-Cost Electrochemical Cell for In Situ XRD Analysis of Electrode Materials

Benjamin E. Wilson; William H. Smyrl; Andreas Stein


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Conduction and Surface Effects in Cathode Materials: Li8ZrO6 and Doped Li8ZrO6

Shuping Huang; Yuan Fang; Bo Wang; Benjamin E. Wilson; Nam Tran; Donald G. Truhlar; Andreas Stein

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Yuan Fang

University of Minnesota

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Bo Wang

University of Minnesota

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