Christine Frayret
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Christine Frayret.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010
Christine Frayret; Antoine Villesuzanne; Nicola A. Spaldin; Eric Bousquet; Jean -Noel Chotard; Nadir Recham; Jean-Marie Tarascon
A theoretical study of the lithium intercalated LiMSO(4)F and deintercalated MSO(4)F systems, where M = Fe, Co and Ni has been performed within the framework of density functional theory. Beyond predictions of structural evolution and average voltages versus a lithium electrode, we have applied partial density of states and Baders topological analysis of the electron density to the study of lithium deintercalation. Upon lithium extraction, charge rearrangement occurs for nickel between different d-orbitals, but with little net positive charge gain, while cobalt and iron atoms end up with a clear oxidized state. The participation of oxygen ions in accepting the electron of the lithium is thus enhanced for LiNiSO(4)F. However, this effect does not affect the long-range electrostatic interactions a lot in the lithiated phase, since the valence of all transition metals is very close due to initial lower oxidized state for the Ni atom in the host. It is found that this is not essentially a long-range electrostatic interaction within the lithiated phase but within the host which explains, at least partly, the increase in voltage by passing from Fe to Ni. Our results also shed light upon the possibility of getting an approximate evaluation of the local strain associated with delithiation from the atomic volume evolutions, which are also likely to affect the electrochemical potential.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012
Anne-Lise Barrès; Joaquin Geng; Gaëtan Bonnard; Stéven Renault; Sébastien Gottis; Olivier Mentré; Christine Frayret; Franck Dolhem; Philippe Poizot
Efficient organic Li-ion batteries require air-stable lithiated organic structures that can reversibly deintercalate Li at sufficiently high potentials. To date, most of the cathode materials reported in the literature are typically synthesized in their fully oxidized form, which restricts the operating potential of such materials and requires use of an anode material in its lithiated state. Reduced forms of quinonic structures could represent examples of lithiated organic-based cathodes that can deintercalate Li(+) at potentials higher than 3 V thanks to substituent effects. Having previously recognized the unique electrochemical properties of the C(6)O(6)-type ring, we have now designed and then elaborated, through a simple three-step method, lithiated 3,6-dihydroxy-2,5-dimethoxy-p-benzoquinone, a new redox amphoteric system derived from the tetralithium salt of tetrahydroxy-p-benzoquinone. Electrochemical investigations revealed that such an air-stable salt can reversibly deintercalate one Li(+) ion on charging with a practical capacity of about 100 mAh g(-1) at about 3 V, albeit with a polarization effect. Better capacity retention was obtained by simply adding an adsorbing additive. A tetrahydrated form of the studied salt was also characterized by XRD and first-principles calculations. Various levels of theory were probed, including DFT with classical functionals (LDA, GGA, PBEsol, revPBE) and models for dispersion corrections to DFT. One of the modified dispersion-corrected DFT schemes, related to a rescaling of both van der Waals radii and s(6) parameter, provides significant improvements to the description of this kind of crystal over other treatments. We then applied this optimized approach to the screening of hypothetical frameworks for the delithiated phases and to search for the anhydrous structure.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012
Christine Frayret; Ekaterina I. Izgorodina; Douglas R. MacFarlane; Antoine Villesuzanne; Anne-Lise Barrès; Olivier Politano; Didier Rebeix; Philippe Poizot
The stacking parameters, lattice constants, and bond lengths of solvent-free dilithium squarate (Li(2)C(4)O(4)) crystals were investigated using density functional theory with and without dispersion corrections. The shortcoming of the GGA (PBE) calculation with respect to the dispersive forces appears in the form of an overestimation of the unit cell volume up to 5.8%. The original Grimme method for dispersion corrections has been tested together with modified versions of this scheme by changing the damping function. One of the modified dispersion-corrected DFT schemes, related to a rescaling of van der Waals radii, provides significant improvements for the description of intermolecular interactions in Li(2)C(4)O(4) crystals: the predicted unit cell volume lies then within 0.9% from experimental data. We applied this optimised approach to the screening of hypothetical framework structures for the delithiated (LiC(4)O(4)) and lithiated (Li(3)C(4)O(4)) phases, i.e. oxidized and reduced squarate forms. Their relative energies have been analysed in terms of dispersion and electrostatic contributions. The most stable phases among the hypothetical models for a given lithiation rate were selected in order to calculate the corresponding average voltages (either upon lithiation or delithiation of Li(2)C(4)O(4)). A first step towards energy partitioning in view of interpretating crystal phases relative stability in link with (de)-intercalation processes has been performed through the explicit evaluation of electrostatic components of lattice energy from atomic charges gained with the Atoms in Molecules (AIM) method.
RSC Advances | 2013
Gaëtan Bonnard; Anne-Lise Barrès; Yann Danten; Damian G. Allis; Olivier Mentré; Daniele Tomerini; Carlo Gatti; Ekaterina I. Izgorodina; Philippe Poizot; Christine Frayret
In the search for low-polluting electrode materials for batteries, the use of redox-active organic compounds represents a promising alternative to conventional metal-based systems. In this article we report a combined experimental and theoretical study of tetramethoxy-p-benzoquinone (TMQ). In carbonate-based electrolytes, electrochemical behaviour of this compound is characterized by a reversible insertion process located at approximately 2.85 V vs. Li+/Li0. This relatively high potential reactivity, coupled with our effort to develop computational methodologies in the field of organic electrode materials, prompted us to complement these experimental data with theoretical studies performed using density functional theory (DFT). Single crystals of TMQ were synthesized and thoroughly characterized showing that this quinonic species crystallised in the P21/n space group. The experimental crystal structure of TMQ was then used to assess various DFT methods. The structural features and vibrational spectra were thus predicted by using as a whole five common density functionals (PBE, LDA, revPBE, PBEsol, B3PW91) with and without a semi-empirical correction to account for the van der Waals interactions using either Grimmes (DFT-D2) or Tkatchenko–Scheffler (TS) scheme. The most reliable combination of the DFT functional and the explicit dispersion correction was chosen to study the Li-intercalated molecular crystal (LiTMQ) with the view of indentifying Li insertion sites. A very close agreement with the experiment was found for the average voltage by using the most stable relaxed hypothetical LiTMQ structure. Additionally, a comparison of vibrational spectra gained either for TMQ molecule and its dimer in gas phase or through periodic calculation was undertaken with respect to the experimentally measured infrared spectra. The topological features of the bonds were also investigated in conjunction with estimates of net atomic charges to gain insight into the effect of chemical bonding and intermolecular interaction on Li intercalation. Finally, π-electron delocalization of both quinone and alkali salts of p-semiquinone were determined using the Harmonic Oscillator model of Aromaticity (HOMA) or aromatic fluctuation index (FLU) calculations.
CrystEngComm | 2013
Gaëtan Bonnard; Anne-Lise Barrès; Olivier Mentré; Damian G. Allis; Carlo Gatti; Philippe Poizot; Christine Frayret
Following our first experimental and computational study of the room temperature (RT) form of the tetrahydrated 3,6-dihydroxy-2,5-dimethoxy-p-benzoquinone dilithium salt (Li2DHDMQ·4H2O), we have researched the occurrence of hydrogen ordering in a new polymorph at lower temperature. The study of polymorphism for the Li2DHDMQ·4H2O phase employs both experimental (single crystal X-ray diffraction) and theoretical approaches. While clues for disorder over one bridging water molecule were observed at RT (β form), a fully ordered model within a supercell has been evidenced at 100 K (α form) and is discussed in conjunction with the features characterizing the first polymorphic form reported previously. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations augmented with an empirical dispersion correction (DFT-D) were applied for the prediction of the structural and chemical bonding properties of the α and β polymorphs of Li2DHDMQ·4H2O. The relative stability of the two polymorphic systems is evidenced. An insight into the interplay of hydrogen bonding, electrostatic and van der Waals (vdW) interactions in affecting the properties of the two polymorphs is gained. This study also shows how information from DFT-D calculations can be used to augment the information from the experimental crystal diffraction data and can so play an active role in crystal structure determination, especially by increasing the reliability and accuracy of H-positioning. These more accurate hydrogen coordinates allowed for a quantification of H-bonding strength through a topological analysis of the electron density (atoms-in-molecules theory).
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Daniele Tomerini; Olivier Politano; Carlo Gatti; Christine Frayret
By calling on modelling approaches we have performed a comparative study on the redox properties of various naphtho-, biphenyl- and biphenylene-quinone isomers. These different compounds exhibit as a whole a redox potential range between 2.09 and 2.90 V vs. Li+/Li. A specific methodology was used to decrypt the interplay among isomerism, aromaticity and antiaromaticity modifications and the stabilization/destabilization effects due to other molecular components on this key electrochemical feature for electrode materials of batteries. In particular, energy decomposition analysis, within the Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules, along with the electron and electron spin population changes upon reduction nicely rationalise the observed potential trends. While 1,2- and 2,3-isomers show the highest/lowest redox potential in the biphenylene-quinone series, a reverse trend is observed for the naphtho-quinone, the compound having the two carbonyl groups on distinct rings being characterized by an intermediate value in both cases. There is instead almost no differentiation between 1,2 and 2,3 isomers for the biphenyl-quinone family.
Advances in Science and Technology | 2014
Christine Frayret; Daniele Tomerini; Carlo Gatti; Yann Danten; Matthieu Becuwe; Franck Dolhem; Philippe Poizot
We present DFT investigations on the redox properties of quinone based precursors exhibiting growing interest from the electrochemists community due to their potential application as electrodes for new battery devices, with lower ecological footprint. A screening of various substituents is undertaken with the aim of providing guidelines to the experimentalists towards most promising candidates. A comparison of the effect of aromaticity extension is provided through the comparison of 1,4-benzo-/naphtho-/anthra-quinone and 9,10-anthraquinone backbones. Additionally, this work allowed the establishment of a ranking and quantitative assessment of substituents with respect to both increase and decrease of the redox voltage (useful for positive and negative electrodes, respectively) by considering such functionalizing groups for the monosubstitution of the 1,4-benzoquinone. Our computational work elucidates important fundamental relationships between redox voltage and local chemical bonding features, which may serve to the comprehension and design of new organic electrodes.
Defect and Diffusion Forum | 2012
Christine Frayret; Antoine Villesuzanne; M. Pouchard; Fabrice Mauvy; Jean Marc Bassat; Jean Claude Grenier
In CeO2-based solid electrolytes, it has been shown that point defects are directly responsible for oxygen ionic conduction. The ionic conductivity is strongly affected by the anion vacancy concentration which is enhanced by doping with aliovalent cations. When rare earth sesquioxides such as La2O3, Gd2O3, Sm2O3, Y2O3 are added to CeO2, the dopant cation substitutes for the cerium ion, and oxygen vacancies are created for charge compensation. Incorporation of trivalent dopants into CeO2 at the Ce4+ sites can be depicted by the following defect reaction (expressed in Kröger-Vink notation):
Chemistry of Materials | 2012
Nadir Recham; G. Rousse; Moulay Tahar Sougrati; Jean-Noel̈ Chotard; Christine Frayret; Sathiya Mariyappan; Brent C. Melot; Jean-Claude Jumas; Jean-Marie Tarascon
Chemistry of Materials | 2005
Christine Frayret; and Antoine Villesuzanne; M. Pouchard