Rangeet Bhattacharyya
Stony Brook University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rangeet Bhattacharyya.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Baris Key; Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Mathieu Morcrette; Vincent Seznec; Jean-Marie Tarascon; Clare P. Grey
Lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) containing silicon negative electrodes have been the subject of much recent investigation because of the extremely large gravimetric and volumetric capacity of silicon. The crystalline-to-amorphous phase transition that occurs on electrochemical Li insertion into crystalline Si, during the first discharge, hinders attempts to link structure in these systems with electrochemical performance. We apply a combination of static, in situ and magic angle sample spinning, ex situ (7)Li nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies to investigate the changes in local structure that occur in an actual working LIB. The first discharge occurs via the formation of isolated Si atoms and smaller Si-Si clusters embedded in a Li matrix; the latter are broken apart at the end of the discharge, forming isolated Si atoms. A spontaneous reaction of the lithium silicide with the electrolyte is directly observed in the in situ NMR experiments; this mechanism results in self-discharge and potential capacity loss. The rate of this self-discharge process is much slower when CMC (carboxymethylcellulose) is used as the binder.
Nature Materials | 2010
Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Baris Key; Hailong Chen; Adam S. Best; Anthony F. Hollenkamp; Clare P. Grey
Lithium metal has the highest volumetric and gravimetric energy density of all negative-electrode materials when used as an electrode material in a lithium rechargeable battery. However, the formation of lithium dendrites and/or moss on the metal electrode surface can lead to short circuits following several electrochemical charge-discharge cycles, particularly at high rates, rendering this class of batteries potentially unsafe and unusable owing to the risk of fire and explosion. Many recent investigations have focused on the development of methods to prevent moss/dendrite formation. In parallel, it is important to quantify Li-moss formation, to identify the conditions under which it forms. Although optical and electron microscopy can visually monitor the morphology of the lithium-electrode surface and hence the moss formation, such methods are not well suited for quantitative studies. Here we report the use of in situ NMR spectroscopy, to provide time-resolved, quantitative information about the nature of the metallic lithium deposited on lithium-metal electrodes.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007
Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Lucio Frydman
The acquisition of ideal powder line shapes remains a recurring challenge in solid-state wideline nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Certain species, particularly quadrupolar spins in sites associated with large electric field gradients, are difficult to excite uniformly and with good efficiencies. This paper discusses some of the opportunities that arise upon departing from standard spin-echo excitation approaches and switching to echo sequences that use low-power, frequency-swept radio frequency (rf) pulses instead. The reduced powers demanded by such swept rf fields allow one to excite spins in different crystallites efficiently and with orientation-independent pulse angles, while the large bandwidths of interest that are needed by the measurement can be covered, thanks to the use of broadband frequency sweeps. The fact that the spins evolution and ensuing dephasing starts at the beginning of such rf manipulation calls for the use of spin-echo sequences; a number of alternatives capable of providing the desired line shapes both in the frequency and in the time domains are introduced and experimentally demonstrated. Sensitivity- and lineshape-wise these experiments are competitive vis-a-vis current implementations of wideline quadrupolar NMR based on hard rf pulses; additional opportunities that may derive from these ideas are also briefly discussed.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2009
Reut Avni; Oren Mangoubi; Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Hadassa Degani; Lucio Frydman
NMR experiments devised to aid in analyses of tissues include magnetization transfer (MT), which can highlight the signals of biological macromolecules through cross-relaxation and/or chemical exchange processes with the bulk (1)H water resonance, and high-resolution magic-angle-spinning (HRMAS) methods, akin to those used in solid-state NMR to introduce additional spectral resolution via the averaging of spin anisotropies. This paper explores the result of combining these methodologies, and reports on MT z-spectroscopy between water and cell components in excised tissues under a variety of HRMAS conditions. Main features arising from the resulting (1)H MTMAS experiments include strong spinning sideband manifolds centered at the liquid water shift, high-resolution isotropic features coinciding with aliphatic and amide proton resonances, and a second sideband manifold arising as spinning speeds are increased. Interpretations are given for the origin of these various features, including simulations shedding further light onto the nature of MT NMR signals observed for tissue samples. Concurrently, histological examinations are reported validating the limits of HRMAS NMR procedures to the analysis of tissue samples preserved in a number of different ways.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006
Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Lucio Frydman
Meeting Abstracts | 2008
Baris Key; Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Hailong Chen; Clare P. Grey
Meeting Abstracts | 2010
Adam S. Best; Baris Key; Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Clare P. Grey; Anthony F. Hollenkamp
Meeting Abstracts | 2009
Baris Key; Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Mathieu Morcrette; Vincent Seznec; Jean-Marie Tarascon; Clare Philomena Grey
Meeting Abstracts | 2009
Baris Key; Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Hailong Chen; Meng Jiang; Dongli Zeng; Clare P. Grey
Meeting Abstracts | 2008
Baris Key; Rangeet Bhattacharyya; Mathieu Morcrette; Vincent Seznec; Jean-Marie Tarascon; Clare P. Grey
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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