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Engineered artificial minerals (EnAMs) are the core of a new concept of designing scavenger compounds for the recovery of critical elements from slags. It requires a fundamental understanding of solidification from complex oxide melts. Ion diffusivity and viscosity play vital roles in this process. In the melt, phase separations and ion transport give rise to gradients/increments in composition and, with it, to ion diffusivity, temperature, and viscosity. Due to this complexity, solidification phenomena are yet not well understood. If the melt is understood as increments of simple composition on a microscopic level, then the properties of these are more easily accessible from models and experiments. Here, we obtain these data for three stoichiometric lithium aluminum oxides. LiAlO is a promising EnAM for the recovery of lithium from lithium-ion battery pyrometallurgical processing. It is obtained through the addition of aluminum to the recycling slag melt. The high temperature properties spanning from below to above the liquidus temperature of three stoichiometric Li-Al-Oxides: LiAlO, LiAlO, and LiAlO are determined using molecular dynamic simulations. The compounds are also synthesized via the sol-gel route. The Li ion exhibits the largest diffusivity. They are quite mobile already below the liquidus temperature, i.e., for LiAlO at = 1700 K, the diffusion coefficient of the lithium ion equals = 3.0 × 10 m s. The other ions Al and O do not move considerably at that temperature. The diffusivity of Li is largest in the lithium-rich compound LiAlO with = 32 × 10 m s at 2500 K. The lower the viscosity, the higher the lithium content. The LiAlO exhibits a viscosity of η = 2.2 mPa s at 1328 K which matches well with the experimentally determined 2.5 mPa s at this temperature. The viscosity of LiAlO at 1800 K is more than two times higher. These data sets can help to describe the melts on a microscopic level and understand how the melt properties will change due to gradients in the Li/Al concentration.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.4c00723 | DOI Listing |
ChemSusChem
July 2025
School of Materials Science and Engineering, Engineering Research Center of High-Performance Copper Alloy Materials and Processing, Ministry of Education, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei, Anhui, 230009, China.
Surface coating is an efficient way to reduce side reactions between cathode materials and electrolytes, thus enhancing the cycle stability of cathode materials. In this study, a novel surface-coating strategy based on the melt curing process is introduced, which forms an ionic conductive LiAlO layer on the surface of LiCoO/LiNiMnO cathode materials and enhances the cycle stability of these cathode materials. Comprehensive characterizations, including scanning electron microscopy, energy dispersive spectrometer, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) confirm the uniformity and thin LiAlO coating.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Mater
May 2025
Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, U.K.
An understanding of the nature of the grain boundaries and impurity phases contained in complex mixed metal oxide solid electrolytes is key to the development of improved and more stable solid-state batteries with reduced grain boundary resistances and higher ionic conductivities of the bulk sample. The Li-ion solid electrolyte LiLaZrO (LLZO) is one of the most researched electrolytes in the field due to its high ionic conductivity, thermal stability, and wide voltage stability window. Despite its potential, the nature of the impurity and surface phases formed during the synthesis of LLZO and their role and influence on LLZO's performance when used as an electrolyte remain poorly understood and controlled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Mater
February 2025
State Key Laboratory of Materials-oriented Chemical Engineering, School of Energy Science and Engineering, Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, 211816, China.
The "shuttle effect" and the unchecked growth of lithium dendrites during operation in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries seriously impact their practical applications. Besides, the performances of Li-S batteries at high current densities and sulfur loadings hold the key to bridge the gap between laboratory research and practical applications. To address the above issues and facilitate the practical utilization of Li-S batteries, the commercial separator is modified with solid electrolyte (nanorod LiAlO, LAO) and conductive carbon (Super P) to obtain a double coated separator (SPLAOMS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
December 2024
National Energy Technology Laboratory, 626 Cochran Mill Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15236, USA.
The nickel-plated zircaloy-4 is used as a tritium (H) getter in the tritium-producing burnable absorber rods (TPBARs) to capture H produced in the Li-riched annular γ-LiAlO pellet under neutron irradiation. The experimental data and our previous theoretical results showed that the H species produced from the γ-LiAlO pellet were mainly H and HO. These H species diffuse from the surface of the LiAlO pellet across vacuum to the nickel-plated zircaloy-4 getter and then further diffuse into the getter to chemically form metal hydrides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMembranes (Basel)
November 2024
Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Escuela Superior de Ingeniería Química e Industrias Extractivas, Departamento de Ingeniería en Metalurgia y Materiales, UPALM-Zacatenco, IPN Avenue, Mexico City 07738, Mexico.
Recently, ceramic-carbonate membrane reactors have been proposed to selectively separate CO at elevated temperatures and to valorize this pollutant gas by coupling a catalyzed reaction. This work explores using a membrane reactor to perform the oxidative reforming of propane by taking advantage of the CO- and O-permeating properties of a LiAlO/Ag-carbonate membrane. The fabricated membrane showed excellent permeation properties, such as CO/N and O/N selectivity, when operating in the 725-850 °C temperature range.
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