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Dive into the research topics where Jürgen Janek is active.

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Featured researches published by Jürgen Janek.


Nature Materials | 2013

A rechargeable room-temperature sodium superoxide (NaO2) battery

Pascal Hartmann; Conrad L. Bender; Miloš Vračar; Anna Katharina Dürr; Arnd Garsuch; Jürgen Janek; Philipp Adelhelm

In the search for room-temperature batteries with high energy densities, rechargeable metal-air (more precisely metal-oxygen) batteries are considered as particularly attractive owing to the simplicity of the underlying cell reaction at first glance. Atmospheric oxygen is used to form oxides during discharging, which-ideally-decompose reversibly during charging. Much work has been focused on aprotic Li-O(2) cells (mostly with carbonate-based electrolytes and Li(2)O(2) as a potential discharge product), where large overpotentials are observed and a complex cell chemistry is found. In fact, recent studies evidence that Li-O(2) cells suffer from irreversible electrolyte decomposition during cycling. Here we report on a Na-O(2) cell reversibly discharging/charging at very low overpotentials (< 200 mV) and current densities as high as 0.2 mA cm(-2) using a pure carbon cathode without an added catalyst. Crystalline sodium superoxide (NaO(2)) forms in a one-electron transfer step as a solid discharge product. This work demonstrates that substitution of lithium by sodium may offer an unexpected route towards rechargeable metal-air batteries.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2011

Room-temperature sodium-ion batteries: Improving the rate capability of carbon anode materials by templating strategies

Sebastian Wenzel; Takeshi Hara; Jürgen Janek; Philipp Adelhelm

Current kinetic limitations of carbon anode materials in sodium-ion batteries can be effectively tackled by using tailor-made carbon materials with hierarchical porosity prepared via the nanocasting route. Capacities exceeding 100 mA h g−1 at C/5 are found while exhibiting excellent rate capability and reasonable cycle life.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

TEMPO: A Mobile Catalyst for Rechargeable Li-O2 Batteries

Benjamin J. Bergner; Adrian Schürmann; Klaus Peppler; Arnd Garsuch; Jürgen Janek

Nonaqueous Li-O2 batteries are an intensively studied future energy storage technology because of their high theoretical energy density. However, a number of barriers prevent a practical application, and one of the major challenges is the reduction of the high charge overpotential: Whereas lithium peroxide (Li2O2) is formed during discharge at around 2.7 V (vs Li(+)/Li), its electrochemical decomposition during the charge process requires potentials up to 4.5 V. This high potential gap leads to a low round-trip efficiency of the cell, and more importantly, the high charge potential causes electrochemical decomposition of other cell constituents. Dissolved oxidation catalysts can act as mobile redox mediators (RM), which enable the oxidation of Li2O2 particles even without a direct electric contact to the positive electrode. Herein we show that the addition of 10 mM TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinyloxyl), homogeneously dissolved in the electrolyte, provides a distinct reduction of the charging potentials by 500 mV. Moreover, TEMPO enables a significant enhancement of the cycling stability leading to a doubling of the cycle life. The efficiency of the TEMPO mediated catalysis was further investigated by a parallel monitoring of the cell pressure, which excludes a considerable contribution of a parasitic shuttle (i.e., internal ionic short circuit) to the anode during cycling. We prove the suitability of TEMPO by a systematic study of the relevant physical and chemical properties, i.e., its (electro)chemical stability, redox potential, diffusion coefficient and the influence on the oxygen solubility. Furthermore, the charging mechanisms of Li-O2 cells with and without TEMPO were compared by combining different electrochemical and analytical techniques.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013

A comprehensive study on the cell chemistry of the sodium superoxide (NaO2) battery

Pascal Hartmann; Conrad L. Bender; Joachim Sann; Anna Katharina Dürr; Martin Jansen; Jürgen Janek; Philipp Adelhelm

This work reports on the cell chemistry of a room temperature sodium-oxygen battery using an electrolyte of diethylene glycol dimethyl ether (diglyme) and sodium trifluoromethanesulfonate (NaSO3CF3, sodium triflate). Different from lithium-oxygen cells, where lithium peroxide is found as the discharge product, sodium superoxide (NaO2) is formed in the present cell, with overpotentials as low as 100 mV during charging. Several analytical methods are used to follow the cell reaction during discharge and charge. Changes in structure and morphology are studied by SEM and XRD. It is found that NaO2 grows as cubic particles with feed sizes in the range of 10-50 μm; upon recharge the particles consecutively decompose. Pressure monitoring during galvanostatic cycling shows that the coulombic efficiency (e(-)/O2) for discharge and charge is approx. 1.0, the expected value for NaO2 formation. Also optical spectroscopy is identified as a convenient and useful tool to follow the discharge-charge process. The maximum discharge capacity is found to be limited by oxygen transport within the electrolyte soaked carbon fiber cathode and pore blocking near the oxygen interface is observed. Finally electrolyte decomposition and sodium dendrite growth are identified as possible reasons for the limited capacity retention of the cell. The occurrence of undesired side reactions is analyzed by DEMS measurements during cycling as well as by post mortem XPS investigations.


Solid State Ionics | 1999

Electrochemical blackening of yttria-stabilized zirconia – morphological instability of the moving reaction front

Jürgen Janek; Carsten Korte

Electrochemical reduction was performed on both polycrystals of calcia-stabilized zirconia (CSY) and single crystals of yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) at 500°C. A glass-encapsulation was used to prevent access of molecular oxygen from the gas phase and to realize a virtually two-dimensional geometry for the reacting crystal. The resulting blackening process which occurs by the advancement of a morphologically unstable reaction front was observed in-situ in a heating-stage by the use of an optical microscope.


Green Chemistry | 2007

Ionic liquids as green electrolytes for the electrodeposition of nanomaterials

S. Zein El Abedin; Manuel Pölleth; Sebastian A. Meiss; Jürgen Janek; Frank Endres

Ionic liquids, especially air and water stable ones, experience much attention, since they have attractive physical properties. We exemplify in this paper the potential of ionic liquids in the electrodeposition of nanocrystalline metals without additives. The results show that nanocrystalline copper and aluminium can be electrodeposited in the air and water stable ionic liquids 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium trifluoromethanesulfonate ([BMP]TFO) and 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)amide ([BMP]Tf2N), respectively, on conventional solid electrodes with sufficient electronic conductivity. Generally, the obtained Al or Cu deposits are shiny, dense and adherent with very fine crystallites with average sizes of about 30 and 40 nm, respectively. The [BMP]+ cation might act as a grain refiner, leading to nanosized deposits. The results of first attempts to use plasmas as mechanically contact-free electrodes for the cathodic deposition of nanoscaled metals (glow discharge electrodeposition) are also presented. The relevance of our results for the development of a green process to make nanomaterials as catalysts for fuel processing is briefly discussed.


Nature Materials | 2008

A chemically driven insulator-metal transition in non-stoichiometric and amorphous gallium oxide.

Lakshmi Nagarajan; Roger A. De Souza; D. Samuelis; Ilia Valov; A. Börger; Jürgen Janek; K.D. Becker; Peter C. Schmidt; Manfred Martin

Insulator-metal transitions are well known in transition-metal oxides, but inducing an insulator-metal transition in the oxide of a main group element is a major challenge. Here, we report the observation of an insulator-metal transition, with a conductivity jump of seven orders of magnitude, in highly non-stoichiometric, amorphous gallium oxide of approximate composition GaO(1.2) at a temperature around 670 K. We demonstrate through experimental studies and density-functional-theory calculations that the conductivity jump takes place at a critical gallium concentration and is induced by crystallization of stoichiometric Ga(2)O(3) within the metastable oxide matrix-in chemical terms by a disproportionation. This novel mechanism--an insulator-metal transition driven by a heterogeneous solid-state reaction--opens up a new route to achieve metallic behaviour in oxides that are expected to exist only as classic insulators.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Evolution of Li2O2 Growth and Its Effect on Kinetics of Li–O2 Batteries

Chun Xia; Michael Waletzko; Limei Chen; Klaus Peppler; Peter J. Klar; Jürgen Janek

Lithium peroxide (Li2O2), the solid and intrinsically electronic insulating discharge product of Li-O2 batteries strongly influences the discharge and charge kinetics. In a series of experiments, we investigated the growth of Li2O2 upon discharge and the corresponding reduction and oxidation processes by varying the depth of discharge. The results indicate that insulating Li2O2 particles with a disc-like shape were formed during the initial discharge stage. Afterward, the nucleation and growth of Li2O2 resulted in the formation of conducting Li2O2 shells. When the discharge voltage dropped below 2.65 V, the Li2O2 discs evolved to toroid-shaped particles and defective superoxide-like phase presumably with high conductivity was formed on the rims of Li2O2 toroids. Both Li2O2 and the superoxide-like phase are unstable in ether-based electrolytes resulting in the degradation of the corresponding cells. Nevertheless, by controlling the growth of Li2O2, the chemical reactivity of the discharge product can be suppressed to improve the reversibility of Li-O2 batteries.


Monatshefte Fur Chemie | 2009

Influence of interface structure on mass transport in phase boundaries between different ionic materials: Experimental studies and formal considerations

C. Korte; N. Schichtel; Dietrich Hesse; Jürgen Janek

AbstractInternal and external interfaces in solids exhibit completely different transport properties compared to the bulk. Transport parallel to grain or phase boundaries is usually strongly enhanced. Transport perpendicular to an interface is usually blocked, i.e., transport across an interface is often much slower. Due to the high density of interfaces in modern micro- and nanoscaled devices, a severe influence on the total transport properties can be expected. In contrast to diffusion in metal grain boundaries, transport phenomena in boundaries of ionic materials are still less understood. The specific transport properties along metal grain boundaries are explained by structural factors like packing densities or dislocation densities in the interface region. In most studies dealing with ionic materials, the interfacial transport properties are merely explained by the influence of space charge regions. In this study the influence of the interface structure on the interfacial transport properties of ionic materials is discussed in analogy to metallic materials. A qualitative model based on the density of misfit dislocations and on interfacial strain is introduced for (untilted and untwisted) phase boundaries. For experimental verification, the interfacial ionic conductivity of different multilayer systems consisting of stabilised ZrO2 and an insulating oxide is investigated as a funtion of structural mismatch. As predicted by the model, the interfacial conductivity increases when the lattice mismatch is increased.Graphical abstract


Nature Chemistry | 2016

Dynamic formation of a solid-liquid electrolyte interphase and its consequences for hybrid-battery concepts

Martin R. Busche; Thomas Drossel; Thomas Leichtweiss; Dominik A. Weber; Mareike Falk; Meike Schneider; Maria-Louisa Reich; Heino Sommer; Philipp Adelhelm; Jürgen Janek

The discharging and charging of batteries require ion transfer across phase boundaries. In conventional lithium-ion batteries, Li(+) ions have to cross the liquid electrolyte and only need to pass the electrode interfaces. Future high-energy batteries may need to work as hybrids, and so serially combine a liquid electrolyte and a solid electrolyte to suppress unwanted redox shuttles. This adds new interfaces that might significantly decrease the cycling-rate capability. Here we show that the interface between a typical fast-ion-conducting solid electrolyte and a conventional liquid electrolyte is chemically unstable and forms a resistive solid-liquid electrolyte interphase (SLEI). Insights into the kinetics of this new type of interphase are obtained by impedance studies of a two-chamber cell. The chemistry of the SLEI, its growth with time and the influence of water impurities are examined by state-of-the-art surface analysis and depth profiling.

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Torsten Brezesinski

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Heino Sommer

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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