MRL Room 2053
Speaker
Wolfgang Zeier, PhD
Professor and Head of Department “Interfacial Chemistry in Solid State Batteries"
University of Münster & Helmholtz-Institute Münster, Germany
Host
Raphaële Clément and Ram Seshadri
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The advent of solid-state batteries has spawned a recent increase in interest in lithium conducting solid electrolytes. In this presentation, we will show how an understanding of their structure-transport properties can help tailor ionic conductivity. Two examples will be shown in which the first will highlight the need to design anionic disorder and the second the need to study the local structure. In a second part of this talk, we will show that it is not only important to find fast ionic conductors, but that fast ionic conduction is paramount within solid state battery composites. Measuring the effective ionic transport in cathode composites provides an avenue to explore transport and stability limitations that in turn provide better criteria for solid state battery performance. Finally, we will explore strain effects in solid electrolytes and how pressure affects microstructure, transport and electrochemical properties of solid ionic conductors.

 

Bio: Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Zeier holds a chair in Solid State Chemistry at the University of Münster. In addition, he heads a department at the Helmholtz-Institute Münster, Ionics in Energy Storage. His research interests encompass the fundamental structure-to-property relationships in solids, with a focus on thermoelectric and ion-conducting materials, as well as solid-solid interfacial chemistry for all-solid-state batteries.