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  Modelling Mixed Ionic and Electronic Transport in Lithium-Ion Electrolytes


   Department of Chemistry

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  Dr Benjamin Morgan  No more applications being accepted  Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

Lead supervisor: Dr Benjamin Morgan, Department of Chemistry
Second supervisor: Professor Alison Walker, Department of Physics

Lithium-ion batteries are ubiquitous, and will play an increasingly important role in the transition to a low-carbon society. Improvements in technology depend on understanding how the specific chemistries of different materials control their performance in batteries. Using computers to simulate lithium-ion battery materials provides a direct picture of atomic scale physical processes, and this can be used to understand the differences between specific materials.

Much computational research of battery materials has focussed on the dynamics of lithium ions during charging or discharging, and well established methods exist for detailed calculations of simple lithium-diffusion processes.

The kinetics of charging and discharging electrodes, however, depend not only only Li transport, but also on electronic transport. Li-ion electrodes often contain redox active transition-metal centers. Mobile electrons or holes exist as strongly localised polarons, corresponding to conceptual oxidation states, and undergo thermally activated transport.

Interactions between Li and electronic distributions can be significant; for example, calculations have shown a significant binding energy between a Li vacancy and the corresponding hole in commercial cathodes LiNiO2 and LiCoO2 [1], and recent x-ray data on LixFePO4 have identified strong correlations between polaron and lithium motions that alter the dynamics of both [2]. Modelling charge/discharge processes in these electrodes requires simulation techniques that can account for mixed ionic–electronic transport.

This project will focus on developing simulation techniques for atomic scale modelling of mixed ionic–electronic transport in Li-ion electrodes, and then applying these to commercially relevant materials. You will learn and use density functional theory, molecular dynamics, and Monte Carlo simulation techniques. The project will use simulation codes developed at the University of Bath, and will also involve the development of new simulation techniques, and writing modelling codes to implement these. The end goal of the project is to simulate charge and discharge processes of lithium-ion electrodes, and to use these to understand the role of material morphology, i.e. surfaces, interfaces, and grain boundaries. The new simulation methods to be developed will have further application in materials where mixed ionic–electronic transport is important, e.g. fuel cell electrodes, perovskite solar cells, and memristive oxides.

Training opportunities:
- Experience developing simulation and analysis modelling codes using compiled and scripting languages (Fortran / Python).
- Experience using a range of modelling techniques applicable: first principles calculations, atomistic molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo.
- Opportunity to develop writing and speaking presentation skills, and to present work at scientific meetings and conferences.
- Opportunity to work on an interdisciplinary project and interact with colleagues in the Department of Chemistry Computational Chemistry section, and in the Department of Physics.
- Opportunity to work with high-performance computing facilities, including national and Bath University facilities.

Anticipated start date: 2 October 2017.


Funding Notes

Some Research Council funding is available on a competition basis to Home and EU students who have been resident in the UK for 3 years prior to the start of the project. For more information on eligibility, see: https://www.epsrc.ac.uk/skills/students/help/eligibility/.

Funding will cover Home/EU tuition fees, a stipend (currently £14,296 per annum for 2016/17) and a training support fee of £1,000 per annum for 3.5 years. Early application is strongly recommended.

Applicants classed as Overseas for tuition fee purposes are NOT eligible for funding; however, we welcome all-year-round applications from self-funded candidates and candidates who can source their own funding.

References

[1] Hoang, K., & Johannes, M. D. (2014). Defect chemistry in layered transition-metal oxides from screened hybrid density functional calculations. Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 2(15), 5224–5235. http://doi.org/10.1039/c4ta00673a

[2] Tracy, S. J., Mauger, L., Tan, H. J., Muñoz, J. A., Xiao, Y., & Fultz, B. (2014). Polaron-ion correlations in LixFePO4 studied by x-ray nuclear resonant forward scattering at elevated pressure and temperature. Physical Review B, 90(9), 094303–9. http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.90.094303

Where will I study?