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Materials for Energy [PHY563] IV: Electrochemical Energy Materials & Catalysis 20/01/2021 Jean-François Guillemoles, Nathanaelle Schneider
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Page 1: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Materials for Energy[PHY563]

IV: Electrochemical Energy Materials & Catalysis

20/01/2021

Jean-François Guillemoles,

Nathanaelle Schneider

Page 2: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Objectives and outline

• Energy conversion and storage

• Basics of electrochemistryo Definitionso Electrochemical reaction driving forceo Ionic conduction

• Basics of catalysiso Key notions: activation energy, catalytic species, activity, selectivity, mechanismo Significance and main applications

• Applications:o Materials for supercapacitorso Materials for batteries (Insertion and conversion materials, tutorial 10/02)o Materials for fuel cells (H2, 10/02)o Related issues : Corrosion ( 12/02) , Photoelectrochemistry, Electrocatalysis ( tutorial)

3

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INTRODUCTION

Background on energy storage

PHY563 – N. Schneider 4

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5

Energy mix evolution and perspectives

Source : GMO Solar Power Europe 2016

Increasing share of renewables

Page 5: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

7

Energy consumption – Necessity of storage

Source : https://www.rte-france.com/fr/eco2mix/eco2mix-consommationFluctuating demand

Page 6: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

8

Energy storage

Mostly PSH

• Heat storage

• Solar thermal

• Molten salts

• Phase Change Materials

• Mechanical storage

• PSH - Pumped Storage Hydroelectricity

• CAES - Compressed Air Energy Storage

• Flywheels

• Electrochemical storage

• Supercapacities

• Batteries

Page 7: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

ELECTROCHEMICAL ENERGY STORAGE AND MORE

PHY563 – N. Schneider 9

Page 8: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

How would you store electricity?

• Types of electrochemical storage you know?

• Can you estimate the energy contained in a cell?

• Its power?

• What is it that you don’t know/ don’t understand about electrochemicalstorage?

o Principles

o Material issues

10

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ELECTROCHEMICAL ENGINES

PHY563 – N. Schneider 12

Page 10: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

13

Key figures

Source: Fundamentals of Materials for Energy and Environmental Sustainability, Edited by D. Ginley, D. Cahen

• Capacitor - electrical energy stored as surface charge

• Battery - electrical energy stored as chemical energy

• Fuel cell = battery where fuel is supplied at one electrode and the oxidant at the other

Page 11: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

SUPERCAPACITORS

Invariant electrolyte and electrodes

PHY563 – N. Schneider 14

What is the driving force?

How much energy can be stored?

What are the issues?

Page 12: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

15

Supercapacitors

Source : www.storagealliance.org

Solid-state capacitor(conventionnal)

EC electrochemical capacitorHigh surface area electrode + liquid electrolyte

• No electrochemical reactions

• Charges are accumulated at the material surface through the double layer (EDL)

Page 13: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

• EDL

Variation of electric potential near a surface, interfacial field

Several descriptions : Helmholtz (1853) > Marcus (Nobel, 1992)

16

EDL – Electrical Double Layer

Debye length (Debye radius) λD

= measure of charge carrier net eletrostatic effect in a solution

and how far it persists

DL Diffuse layer – coulombic interaction + thermal motion, electrically screening the first layer

First layer – surface charges

Page 14: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Supercapacitors

• Electrode materialso Optimum pore size to maximize the capability of the electrolyte

o Inputs of material science, nanosynthesis, simulation and modeling

PHY563 17

Page 15: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Supercapacitors

• No structural changeo Much longer lifetimes (millions of cycles), low maintenance

o Higher rate capabilities, almost instantaneous > repetitive fast applications (braking, acceleration)

• Only surface o Limited energy storage capability (0.1 – 1 Wh./kg)

o Variation of the voltage

• High cost installation

PHY563 18

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BATTERIES EVOLUTION

Batteries type I

PHY563 – N. Schneider 19

Invariant electrolytes

Page 17: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

How to make a battery?

• What are the basic ingredients in a battery?

• What are the desired properties of each component?

PHY563 – N. Schneider 20

Page 18: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Batteries

Ancient technologies with new materials

PHY563 – N. Schneider 21

1899« Jamais contente »

1920Wireless communication

TodayTesla roaster

TodayWireless communication

Page 19: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Batteries

Evolution of batteries

PHY563 – N. Schneider 22

Positive electrode

Negative electrode

electrolyte

e-

2020 Many systems Commercial battery types , sodium-sulfur, redox flow

Quite costly for large scale, stationary applications ~ $ 1000/kWh

Difficulties with large power/long term storage /Cyclability => solid state reactions

Lead battery still cheapest

Page 20: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Batteries

Evolution of batteries

PHY563 – N. Schneider 23

Page 21: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Batteries

Commercial applications

1991LiCoO2/Graphite

2005LiCoO2/Sn-Co-C

Nano-negative

2006LiFePO4/Graphite

Nano-positive

2004Li(Co, Mn,Ni)O2/Graphite

+20%Volumic energy

4 times more powerfull

+60%Mass energy

Very rapid industrial applications

Page 22: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

POTENTIAL (ΔE, Volt)Nature of the redox coupleExtent of reaction

25

Batteries

Tarascon, cours Collège de France (2011)

Number of exchanged electric charges (Coulombs)

POTENTIAL potential : choice

of redox couple

CAPACITY capacity: system exchanging more than 1 electron

CAPACITY (Q, Coulomb, Faraday, Ah)Nature of the redox coupleQuantity of atoms

Nernst equation

Page 23: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Chemical and electrochemical engines

A chemical reactioncan be separated in 2 electrochemical half

reactions

• For one mole

• At each electrode:

Page 24: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Electrode equilibrium: Nernst

• Electric potentials of solution and metal:

• Ideal Solution

• Nernst law:

Page 25: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Losses

(1) Activation overpotential : Potential barrier of redox reaction => reduced by additional potential

(2) Concentration overpotential: Concentration depletion at electrode = > local potential shifted from equilibrium

(3) Conduction overpotential : Ohmic drop

PHY579 – N. Schneider 28

Page 26: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Issues

• Electrode overpotential: reversibility

• Series resistance : power efficiency

• Cyclability and stability (See Lecture on material degradation)

• LCA

Material issues

PHY563 – JF Guillemoles 29

Page 27: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

30

Ox

Strong

Weak

Red

Weak

Strong

Potentiel redox

(Volts) Semi-réactions

H+

Zn(s)Zn2+

H2(g)

Page 28: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Batteries

• Why Lithium batteries?

PHY563 – N. Schneider 31Tarascon, cours Collège de France (2011)

> Small ionic radius

rapid diffusion >> Power

> Works in aqueous medium

>> Thermodynamic limit at 1.2 V

> Lightest metal (6.9g), d= 0.53g.cm-3

> Most electropositive element

>> ΔE 3 – 4V

> High chemical reactivity (water)

>> Organic electrolytes (non aqueous)

Highest energy mass density

Page 29: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

BATTERIES TYPE I : LITHIUM TECHNOLOGIES

Invariant electrolytes/redox electrodes

PHY563 – N. Schneider 32

Page 30: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Li - metal

PHY563 – N. Schneider 33Tarascon, cours Collège de France (2011)

Li-metal > negative electrode = metal Li

Discharge:TiS2 + e- + Li+ TiLiS2Li Li+ + e-

Page 31: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Batteries

• Lithium batteries

PHY563 – N. Schneider 37

Page 32: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Rocking chair batteries - intercalation

PHY563 – N. Schneider 38

Li-ion: electrodes = Li+ intercalation compounds

anodecathode

Page 33: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Rocking chair batteries - intercalation

PHY563 – N. Schneider 39http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/everyday-tech/lithium-ion-battery1.htm

Conventions

• Anode: negatively charged electrode

• Cathode: positively charged electrode

Page 34: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Li Battery at equilibrium

• Negative electrode

Li° Li+ + e- or LixC6 e Li+ + e e- + Lix-eC6

• Positive electrode

e Li+ + e e- + LixMOy Lix+eMOy

• In all cases :

o µLi = µLi+ + µe at each electrode

o µLi+ is constant through electrolyte (equilibrium)

o Hence: V = µeanode - µe

cathode = -µLianode + µLi

cathode

• µLi is related to the formation energy of the electrode

o e.g. O2+ Co +Li LiCoO2

o i.e. µLi + µO2 + µCo = DGf ; µLi° = 0

PHY563 – N. Schneider 40

In this system the electrolyte is « invariant »While electrodes are the « redox » solids

Page 35: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Potential and material properties

PHY563 – N. Schneider 41

Single-phase systemex: LixTiS2

Two-phase systemex: LixFePO4

Page 36: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

PHY563 – N. Schneider 42From JM Tarascon

Page 37: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Li-technologies – electrode materials

PHY563 – N. Schneider 44

Page 38: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Li-technologies – electrode materials

PHY563 – N. Schneider 46

LiMnO2/LiCoO2 : 10% less capacity advantage : cost & green

to achieve higher capacities : design materials in which the metal-redox oxidation state can change reversibly by 2 units :

Mn+2/Mn

Preserving frame work structure Molecular masses similar to 3d metal-layer oxides (ex : LiMnO2 or LiCoO2)

Not W, Mo ou Nb : heavy V-based oxides L3V2O5-Li3V3O8

Cr6+/Cr3+

LiMnO2 : structural instability upon cycling : substitution by Cr : Li1+X Mn0.5Cr0,5O2

Capacity : 190 mAhg-1

Mn : stabilize the layered structureCr : large capacity due to oxidation state that changes from +3 to +6

But Cr : presents major toxicity & pricing issues

Page 39: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

BATTERIES TYPE I: ALTERNATIVES

PHY563 – N. Schneider 49

Invariant electrolytes/redox electrodes

Page 40: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Li-S and Li-air batteries

PHY563 – N. Schneider 50

Challenges on Li-air battery:- avoid undesired

reactions (LiO2, …) : need for electro-catalyst,

- avoid dendriticreplating of Li

- non floodingelectrolyte

- Li anode protection from air

- scrubbing system for the air

Tarascon, cours Collège de France (2011)

Page 41: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Na technology

PHY563 – N. Schneider 51Tarascon, cours Collège de France (2011)

Na vs Li

(+) cost(Na2CO3 0.1€/kg vs. Li2CO3 3.5€/kg)abundant

(-) potential -0.3Vcapacity (rionique)

Page 42: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Na technology

PHY563 – N. Schneider 52Tarascon, cours Collège de France (2011)

• Na/S – high T system

o Large scale batteries

o Mature

o Safety issues

Page 43: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Vegetal alternatives

PHY563 – N. Schneider 53

Organic material 1

(electroactive with high potential

3 V vs Li+/Li0)

Non-aqueous electrolyteElectrode (+) Electrode (-)

Li++ -

e e

Organic material 2

(electroactive with low potential

0.5 V vs Li+/Li0)

BIOMASS

From P. Poizot, LRCS

ex: rhodizonate(maïs)

Page 44: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Alternatives

PHY563 – N. Schneider 54

Esta

blis

hed

Futu

re

NATURE|Vol 451|7 February 2008

Page 45: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

BATTERIES TYPE II

Invariant electrodes/redox electrolytes

PHY563 – N. Schneider 55

Page 46: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

• Li batteries:

Invariant electrolyte and redox electrodes

• Other batteries could have redox electrolyte and invariant electrodes

Exemple : concentration Cu cell

Still other case with electrolytes redox and inert electrodes (e.g., graphite) > Redox flow

56

Redox electrolytes

Redox flow batteryPower : surface area of the electrodes

Energy : amount of liquid electrolyte(size of storage tanks)

Power and Energy separated

Page 47: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Redox flow batteries

• Reactants are liquid and heldin large tanks high energy-storage capacity

• Key-element = membraneo Separated two solutions +

selective (only 1 ion) or anio(catio)ic (only anion or cation)

o If mix of electrolytestreatment of solutions (cost)

• Different systems: Fe/Cr, V/Br, Zn/Br, VRB (all V-species, lessinterdiffusion issues)

PHY563 – N. Schneider 57

Page 48: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Redox flow batteries

PHY563 – N. Schneider 58

Vanadium Redox Batteries (VRB)

o Negative: V2+/V3+ ; positive: V4+/V5+ , acidic sol.

o 4 ions form the same element Less interdiffusion issues

Page 49: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Redox flow batteries

Advantages Disadvantages

Large lifetimePower/Energy are decoupledSeasonal storage possible

Low specific energy and powerHigh costSelf discharge

PHY563 – N. Schneider 59

Page 50: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

CATALYSIS

PHY563 – N. Schneider 65

Page 51: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis

• What is a catalyst?

• Which type of catalyst exist?

• Is it relevant?

• Some examples

PHY563 – N. Schneider 66

Page 52: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Catalysis = increase of chemical reaction rate due to the participation of an additional substance (catalyst) : thermodynamics / kinetics

PHY563 – N. Schneider 67

Ea = activation energy

= transition state

k = A.e-Ea/RT (Arrhenius)

o

oo

Catalyzed reaction : ≠ intermediates/ transition stateslower Ea

o = intermediate

Page 53: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Different types of catalysis

PHY563 – N. Schneider68

HETEROGENEOUS Cat. and reactants in different phasesHOMOGENEOUS Cat. and reactants in the same phase, usually liquid

(+) Good contact with reactants(+) Ease of characterization/tuning(-) Catalyst needs to be separated after the reaction(-) Difficult catalyst recovery

ENZYMATIC Cat. is an enzyme

(+) Most highly efficient systems(+,-) Highly specific

(+) Little difficulty in separating and recycling the catalyst(-) Lower effective concentration of catalyst

Ni Raney: Ni/Al

Wilkinson cat.: RhCl(PPh3)3

Polyneuridine AldehydeEsterase

catalyst

loading (mol%)

activity (mol.s-1, quantity converted/time, or TOF (turn-over frequency

selectivity ability to yield a particular product

stability TON (turn-over number)

Page 54: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Catalyst selectivity

= ability to yield a particular product

Page 55: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Five steps of a heterogeneous catalytic reaction

Page 56: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Adsorption / physisorption / chimisorptionPhysisorption:

Exothermic (10-40 kJ.mol-1)low / no Eaweak interaction (VdW)f(P), f (specific area)

Chimisorption:exothermic, Qads = Ebond (60-120 kJ.mol-1)High Eastrong interaction (OM overlaping)f(P), f(surface nature, defects, active sites)

- Langmuir model – monolayer- BET (Brunauer, Emmet, Teller) model – multilayers (chimisorbed + physisorbed molecules on top)

Page 57: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Catalyst dispersion / active siteso Dispersion = nb accessible atoms / total nb of atoms

o Dispersion can be increased by supported catalysts

o Dispersion can be increased by the use of nanoparticles

Handbook of Heterogeneous Catalysis, Wiley, 2008

Page 58: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Supportso Should prevent sintering effects

o Can have acid/base properties bifunctionnal catalysis

o Can allow biphasic systems

o Oxides, Silica, Zeolites (SiAlOxM, M can be a catalyst), graphite, microporous and mesoporous materials (micelles, use of templates)

o Pore size determination: Hg porosimetry, BET

Melero et al, J. Mater. Chem. 2002 12 1664

Silica SiO2

graphite zeolites

SBA-15

Page 59: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – fundamental notions

• Accessible sites ≠ active sites : structure-sensitiveo Electronic properties are size-dependent

o Shape may vary during the reaction

o Large particles are not spherical: atoms with ≠ coordinence

74Lin et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 206801 (2009)

Page 60: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

• Academia

PHY563 – N. Schneider75

Fig. 1 Subject area breakdown of Catalysis Science & Technology's 2014 published articles.

Page 61: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

• Industry90% of industrial processes are catalyzed

(1) Bulk chemicals

- polymerisation (Ziegler-Natta)

- oxydation (nitric/sulfuric acid)

- hydrogenation (NH3 Haber-process, methanol)

- carbonylation (acetic acid, Monsanto-process)

(2) Fine chemicals

- olefin metathesis

- Friedel-Craft

- asymmetric synthesis (pharmaceuticals)

PHY563 – N. Schneider76

Page 62: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

(3) Energy processing

CO2 reduction

See PC

Fuel cells

metal catalysts at both anode and cathode to catalyze half-reactions

commercial devices: Pt nanoparticles or Pt alloy supported on C black

« main obstacle for larger fuel cellcommercialisation »

research devices: doped C nanotubes, Ni-Cr, Ni-Al or Ni-O alloys

PHY563 – N. Schneider77

Source: D. S. Ginley et al, Fundamentals of materials for energy and environmental sustainability-Cambridge University Press (2012)

Page 63: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

(3) Energy processing

Catalytic converters

(petroleum exhaust)

PHY563 – N. Schneider78Source: Handbook of Heterogeneous Catalysis, Wiley, 2008

Reduction (Rh) : NOx N2

Oxydation (Pt) : CO CO2 , HC CO2 + H2Oλ probe + cordierite support + Al2O3 washcoat + CeO2 O2 storage promoters + Pt + Rh

Page 64: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

(3) Energy processing

Catalytic converters

(petroleum refining)

alkylation, cracking, naphta and steam reforming (HC syn-gas)

PHY563 – N. Schneider79

( CO, H2 )

( CO, H2 )

( H2O, CH4 )

steam reforming

Water-gas-shiftH2O + CO CO2 + H2

Adjusted syn-gas, H2/CO=2

syn-gas, H2/CO=0.7

Hydrocarbons + H2OFischer-Tropsch

Page 65: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

(3) Energy processing

Fischer-Tropsch

PHY563 – N. Schneider80

History

1923 : patent from Franz Fischer and Hans Tropsch(Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Kohlenforschung, Mülheiman der Ruhr)

WWII : ersatz fuel (90% plane, 25% automobile)

50’s : South Africa

70’s : Regain of interest due to oil price increase

currently : Sasol, PetroSA, Linc Energy, Shell

Page 66: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

(3) Energy processing

Fischer-Tropsch

PHY563 – N. Schneider81

Sasol-Qatar Petroleum Oryx plant

Page 67: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Catalysis – significance and main applications

(3) Energy processing

Biomass

conversion

PHY563 – N. Schneider83

biomass

SyngasSynthetical gas, {CO + H2}

MethanolCH3OH

Cat. Cu/ZnO440°C, 50 atm

GasificationControlled amount of O2

Hydrocarbon chainsCnH2n+2

Fischer-Tropf process

Fischer-Tropf processtypically catalyzed by Co, FeT 300°C

challenges: - control n value- catalyst deactivation- …

Page 68: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Bibliography: Materials for Energy

PHY563 – N. Schneider 84

Page 69: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Bibliography: Electrochemistry

PHY563 – N. Schneider 85

Page 70: Materials for Energy [PHY563] Chemical Energy Materials 08 ...

Bibliography: Catalysis

PHY563 – N. Schneider 86