Thomas Leichtweiss
University of Giessen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas Leichtweiss.
Nature Chemistry | 2016
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.
Chemical Communications | 2012
Christian Reitz; Christian Suchomski; Jan Haetge; Thomas Leichtweiss; Zvonko Jagličić; Igor Djerdj; Torsten Brezesinski
Combining sol-gel chemistry with polymer templating strategies enables production of CuFe(2)O(4) thin films with both an ordered cubic network of 17 nm diameter pores and tunable spinel domain sizes. These nanocrystalline materials contain only minor structural defects with λ = 0.85 ± 0.02 and exhibit multiple functionalities, including superparamagnetic behavior (T(B)≈ 310 K) and redox- and photoactivity.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Sebastian Wenzel; Thomas Leichtweiss; Dominik A. Weber; Joachim Sann; Wolfgang G. Zeier; Jürgen Janek
The interfacial stability of solid electrolytes at the electrodes is crucial for an application of all-solid-state batteries and protected electrodes. For instance, undesired reactions between sodium metal electrodes and the solid electrolyte form charge transfer hindering interphases. Due to the resulting large interfacial resistance, the charge transfer kinetics are altered and the overvoltage increases, making the interfacial stability of electrolytes the limiting factor in these systems. Driven by the promising ionic conductivities of Na3PS4, here we explore the stability and viability of Na3PS4 as a solid electrolyte against metallic Na and compare it to that of Na-β″-Al2O3 (sodium β-alumina). As expected, Na-β″-Al2O3 is stable against sodium, whereas Na3PS4 decomposes with an increasing overall resistance, making Na-β″-Al2O3 the electrolyte of choice for protected sodium anodes and all-solid-state batteries.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Christian Reitz; Ben Breitung; Artur Schneider; Di Wang; Martin von der Lehr; Thomas Leichtweiss; Jürgen Janek; Horst Hahn; Torsten Brezesinski
Nitrogen-rich carbon with both a turbostratic microstructure and meso/macroporosity was prepared by hard templating through pyrolysis of a tricyanomethanide-based ionic liquid in the voids of a silica monolith template. This multifunctional carbon not only is a promising anode candidate for long-life lithium-ion batteries but also shows favorable properties as anode and cathode host material owing to a high nitrogen content (>8% after carbonization at 900 °C). To demonstrate the latter, the hierarchical carbon was melt-infiltrated with sulfur as well as coated by atomic layer deposition (ALD) of anatase TiO2, both of which led to high-quality nanocomposites. TiO2 ALD increased the specific capacity of the carbon while maintaining high Coulombic efficiency and cycle life: the composite exhibited stable performance in lithium half-cells, with excellent recovery of low rate capacities after thousands of cycles at 5C. Lithium-sulfur batteries using the sulfur/carbon composite also showed good cyclability, with reversible capacities of ∼700 mA·h·g(-1) at C/5 and without obvious decay over several hundred cycles. The present results demonstrate that nitrogen-rich carbon with an interconnected multimodal pore structure is very versatile and can be used as both active and inactive electrode material in high-performance lithium-based batteries.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Wenbo Zhang; Dominik A. Weber; Harald Weigand; Tobias Arlt; Ingo Manke; Daniel Schröder; Raimund Koerver; Thomas Leichtweiss; Pascal Hartmann; Wolfgang G. Zeier; Jürgen Janek
All-solid-state lithium-ion batteries have the potential to become an important class of next-generation electrochemical energy storage devices. However, for achieving competitive performance, a better understanding of the interfacial processes at the electrodes is necessary for optimized electrode compositions to be developed. In this work, the interfacial processes between the solid electrolyte (Li10GeP2S12) and the electrode materials (In/InLi and LixCoO2) are monitored using impedance spectroscopy and galvanostatic cycling, showing a large resistance contribution and kinetic hindrance at the metal anode. The effect of different fractions of the solid electrolyte in the composite cathodes on the rate performance is tested. The results demonstrate the necessity of a carefully designed composite microstructure depending on the desired applications of an all-solid-state battery. While a relatively low mass fraction of solid electrolyte is sufficient for high energy density, a higher fraction of solid electrolyte is required for high power density.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014
Thomas Leichtweiss; Ralph A. Henning; Julius Koettgen; Rüdiger Schmidt; Bernd Holländer; Manfred Martin; Matthias Wuttig; Jürgen Janek
Oxygen-deficient titanium oxide films (TiOx) have been prepared by pulsed laser deposition at room temperature. Samples in their as-deposited state have an average composition of TiO1.6, are optically absorbing and show electronic conductivities in the range of 10 S cm−1. The films are metastable and consist of grains of cubic titanium monoxide (γ-TiO) embedded in an amorphous TiO1.77 matrix. Upon annealing in an argon atmosphere the electrical conductivity of the films increases and comes close to metal-like conductivity (1000 S cm−1) at about 450 °C whereas the local structure is changed: nanocrystalline grains of metallic Ti are formed in the amorphous matrix due to an internal solid state disproportionation. The highly conductive state can be frozen by quenching. During heat treatment in an argon atmosphere a stoichiometric rutile TiO2 surface layer forms due to oxidation by residual oxygen. The combination of a highly conductive TiOx film with such an approximately 20 nm thick rutile cover layer leads to a surprisingly high efficiency for the water-splitting reaction without the application of an external potential.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Christian Reitz; Di Wang; Daniela Stoeckel; Andre Beck; Thomas Leichtweiss; Horst Hahn; Torsten Brezesinski
Mesostructured nonsilicate materials, particularly mixed-metal oxides, are receiving much attention in recent years because of their potential for numerous applications. Via the polymer-templating method, perovskite-type lanthanum strontium manganese oxide (La1-xSrxMnO3, LSMO, with x ≈ 0.15 to 0.30) with a continuous 3D cubic network of 23 nm pores is prepared in thin-film form for the first time. Characterization results from grazing incidence X-ray scattering, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Rutherford backscattering spectrometry, and electron microscopy and tomography show that the dip-coated sol-gel-derived films are of high quality in terms of both composition and morphology and that they are stable to over 700 °C. Magnetic and magnetotransport measurements demonstrate that the material with the highest strontium concentration is ferromagnetic at room temperature and exhibits metallic resistivity behavior below 270 K. Besides, it behaves differently from epitaxial layers (e.g., enhanced low-field magnetoresistance effect). It is also shown that carriers (electrons and holes) can be induced into the polymer-templated mesostructured LSMO films via capacitive double-layer charging. This kind of electrostatic doping utilizing ionic liquid gating causes large relative changes in magnetic susceptibility at room temperature and is a viable technique to tune the magnetic phase diagram in situ.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2017
Junpei Yue; Christian Suchomski; Pascal Voepel; Ruediger Ellinghaus; Marcus Rohnke; Thomas Leichtweiss; Matthias T. Elm; Bernd M. Smarsly
The charge storage mechanism of nanostructured intercalation materials such as anatase (TiO2) is still a matter of intense research, because it provides the basis for designing electrochemical energy storage and conversion materials. In this work, we addressed the relationship between conductivity and the charge storage mechanism exemplified with nanostructured Nb-doped TiO2. Nanoparticles of Nb-doped TiO2 were prepared by a novel two-step solvothermal process based on tert-amyl alcohol as the solvent. Several state-of-the-art techniques, including X-ray diffraction along with Rietveld refinement and Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, were used to analyze the phase composition, the chemical oxidation state and the structure after doping with different niobium contents. Mesoporous Nb-doped TiO2 films with uniform pore sizes of 15 to 18 nm were produced by dip-coating employing these nanoparticles as building blocks. It is found that 5 at% Nb-doped TiO2 exhibits the highest conductivity. The analysis of the peak currents in the cyclic voltammetry of the mesoporous films indicates that the pseudocapacitive current contribution varies with the conductivity in the same trend. This correlation can be described qualitatively by the changes in the space charge layer at the interface with varying carrier concentration. Such a finding implies that doping not only affects the charge storage in the bulk due to changes of kinetic parameters including the chemical diffusion coefficient and electronic conductivity, but also influences the surface-related storage mechanism of a given nanostructured material. These results further provide a valuable insight in searching for and designing materials applied in pseudocapacitors.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018
Wenbo Zhang; Felix H. Richter; Sean P. Culver; Thomas Leichtweiss; J. G. Lozano; Christian Dietrich; Peter G. Bruce; Wolfgang G. Zeier; Jürgen Janek
All-solid-state batteries (ASSBs) show great potential for providing high power and energy densities with enhanced battery safety. While new solid electrolytes (SEs) have been developed with high enough ionic conductivities, SSBs with long operational life are still rarely reported. Therefore, on the way to high-performance and long-life ASSBs, a better understanding of the complex degradation mechanisms, occurring at the electrode/electrolyte interfaces is pivotal. While the lithium metal/solid electrolyte interface is receiving considerable attention due to the quest for high energy density, the interface between the active material and solid electrolyte particles within the composite cathode is arguably the most difficult to solve and study. In this work, multiple characterization methods are combined to better understand the processes that occur at the LiCoO2 cathode and the Li10GeP2S12 solid electrolyte interface. Indium and Li4Ti5O12 are used as anode materials to avoid the instability problems associated with Li-metal anodes. Capacity fading and increased impedances are observed during long-term cycling. Postmortem analysis with scanning transmission electron microscopy, electron energy loss spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy show that electrochemically driven mechanical failure and degradation at the cathode/solid electrolyte interface contribute to the increase in internal resistance and the resulting capacity fading. These results suggest that the development of electrochemically more stable SEs and the engineering of cathode/SE interfaces are crucial for achieving reliable SSB performance.
Zeitschrift Fur Kristallographie | 2017
Ralph A. Henning; Thomas Leichtweiss; Daniel Dorow-Gerspach; Rüdiger Schmidt; Niklas Wolff; Ulrich Schürmann; Yannic Decker; Lorenz Kienle; Matthias Wuttig; Jürgen Janek
Abstract Most functional materials are thermodynamic equilibrium phases representing minima in the thermodynamic phase space. However, it is expected that many metastable phases with highly interesting properties also exist. Here, we report on a systematic approach to prepare thin-films of such non-equilibrium phases based on the gas phase deposition methods sputtering and pulsed laser deposition (PLD). Our synthetic strategy is to deposit a “precursor phase” which is amorphous or already a crystalline non-equilibrium phase. Subsequent heat treatment leads to the nucleation of crystalline phases which again may be metastable or stable compounds. In the present paper we focus on the binary systems Ti–O and Zr–O, both systems being widely applied and technologically relevant. Highly oxygen-deficient titanium oxide (TiO1.6) and zirconium oxide (ZrO) films prepared by pulsed laser deposition at room temperature are optically absorbing and possess electronic conductivities in the range of 10 S/cm. Both materials are metastable in respect to both composition and structure. For TiO1.6 we find an amorphous matrix with embedded grains of cubic titanium monoxide (γ-TiO) directly after deposition. Upon annealing nanocrystalline grains of metallic Ti are formed in the amorphous matrix due to an internal solid-state disproportionation whereas the electrical conductivity of the films increases and comes close to metal-like conductivity (1000 S/cm) at about 450 °C. Congruently, room temperature deposited ZrO films with an average composition of Zr:O= 1:1 contain small ZrO nanocrystals within an amorphous matrix. Heat treatment again leads to an internal disproportionation reaction whereas small crystals of Zr2O and ZrO2 precipitate at temperatures as low as 75 °C. Increasing the temperature then results in the crystallization of metastable tetragonal ZrO2 at about 400 °C. Sputter deposition allows a subtler control of the oxygen partial pressure. Slightly non-stoichiometric TiO2−x films form a degenerate semiconductor with room temperature conductivities as high as 170 S/cm. Moreover, controlling both, the doping level and the vacancy concentration of these films allows to control the phase formation and the transition temperature between the rutile and anatase TiO2 polymorphs. Niobium doping of sputter deposited TiO2 can lead to films with very high electrical conductivities while maintaining a high optical transmittance demonstrating the potential of the material as an alternative transparent conducting oxide (TCO) with extraordinary properties.