Ion exchange is a powerful technique for converting one material to another when synthesizing new products.
In this process, scientists know what reactants lead to what products, but how the process works—the exact pathway of how one material can be converted to another—has remained elusive.
In a paper published today in Nature Materials, a team of UChicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering researchers shed new light on this mystery. In researching lithium cathode materials for battery storage, a team from the Liu Lab has shown that there is a general pathway for lithium and sodium ion exchange in layered oxide cathode materials.
“We systematically explored the ion exchange process in lithium and sodium,” said first author Yu Han, a PhD candidate at PME. “The ion exchange pathway we revealed is new.”
By helping explain how the ion exchange process works, this paper opens the doors for researchers working with metastable materials, meaning materials that aren’t currently in their most stable possible forms. It can also lead to new innovations in atom-efficient manufacturing, using less of the starting precursors and generating less waste when synthesizing materials.
“It will broaden the family of metastable materials people can synthesize,” said PME Asst. Prof. Chong Liu.
New methods
Although the potential applications resonate throughout material synthesis, the paper started by looking at production of lithium for battery cathodes. As climate change pushes the world away from fossil fuels, more and better batteries are needed to store renewable power.
“The old method of solid-state synthesis would be you pick some salt which contains the elements you are looking to synthesize. Then you combine them with the right ratio of each of the element,” Liu said. “Then you burn it.”
Burning the lithium precursors at 800-900 degrees Celsius is more effective when working with stable materials, however. In cases when the metastable form had interesting properties that could theoretically make great battery cathodes, the high temperatures pushed the materials into a new state that was more stable, but often lacking the interesting properties.