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Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry

 

Geoffrey Moorhouse Gibson Professor of Chemistry

Room M21

Materials Chemistry: Structure and Function

We use a wide range of techniques, including solid state NMR and diffraction, to investigate local structure and the role that this plays in controlling the physical properties of technologically important, but disordered materials.

Rechargeable Batteries

New batteries are required for transport applications and for storage and load-leveling on the electrical grid. These batteries should be capable of being charged and discharged faster, and should store much more power, than the batteries currently available. This requires the development of new electrode chemistries and an understanding of how these systems function. To this end, we study a variety of different rechargeable batteries including lithium and sodium ion batteries (LIBs and NIBs).  We probe the mechanisms for lithium insertion and extraction by, for example, using 6Li/7Li NMR and investigate the effect of local structure and electronic properties on LIB battery performance. Two types of electrode materials are investigated, those that operate via intercalation reactions, where the structure remains largely intact upon Li insertion, and those that react via conversion reactions where the structures transform completely upon reaction with Li. In the latter reactions, our studies focus on identifying the nano-sized (or amorphous) phases that form on Li reaction, how they are formed and how to improve the reversibilities of these reactions. Studies of intercalation compounds include the effect of cation doping and ordering on the mechanisms by which these materials react.

In-situ NMR Studies of Battery and Supercapacitor Function

We have developed NMR methodology to monitor structural changes that occur during the operation of a battery/supercapacitor. These in-situ NMR studies allow us to, for example, capture metastable phases, follow reactions between the electrolyte and the electrode materials and to investigate the effect of rapid charging and cycling of the battery.  For supercapacitors, we can, for example, monitor ions entering or leaving the pores of the highly porous materials that form the electrodes of these devices. 

Solid-State Electrolytes for Fuel Cells and Solid State Batteries 

We use NMR to study investigate mechanisms for ionic conduction. By identifying individual crystallographic or interstitial sites in often highly disordered materials, we can determine which sites are responsible for ionic conduction, where the vacancies or interstitial ions are located, and obtain a much deeper understanding of how these materials function as ionic conductors. Studies focus on perovskite materials, which can act as both oxygen and proton (when hydrated) conductors.  We also investigate both oxide and sulphide-based lithium ion conductors for solid state batteries 

Take a tour of the Grey lab facilities

 

Publications

Establishing Ultralow Activation Energies for Lithium Transport in Garnet Electrolytes
FM Pesci, A Bertei, RH Brugge, SP Emge, AKO Hekselman, LE Marbella, CP Grey, A Aguadero
– ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
(2020)
12,
32806
Direct Imaging of Correlated Defect Nanodomains in a Metal-Organic Framework.
DN Johnstone, FCN Firth, CP Grey, PA Midgley, MJ Cliffe, SM Collins
– J Am Chem Soc
(2020)
142,
13081
Investigating the effect of a fluoroethylene carbonate additive on lithium deposition and the solid electrolyte interphase in lithium metal batteries using in situ NMR spectroscopy
AB Gunnarsdóttir, S Vema, S Menkin, LE Marbella, CP Grey
– Journal of Materials Chemistry A
(2020)
8,
14975
Optofluidic hollow-core fibres as raman sensors for li-ion battery chemistry
E Miele, WM Dose, I Manyakin, MH Frosz, CP Grey, JJ Baumberg, TG Euser
– 2020 22nd International Conference on Transparent Optical Networks (ICTON)
(2020)
00,
1
Local Distortions and Dynamics in Hydrated Y-doped BaZrO3
A Torayev, L Sperrin, MA Gomez, J Kattirtzi, C Merlet, C Grey
– The Journal of Physical Chemistry C: Energy Conversion and Storage, Optical and Electronic Devices, Interfaces, Nanomaterials, and Hard Matter
(2020)
Interactions of Oxide Surfaces with Water Revealed with Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy
J Chen, MA Hope, Z Lin, M Wang, T Liu, DM Halat, Y Wen, T Chen, X Ke, PCMM Magusin, W Ding, X Xia, X-P Wu, X-Q Gong, CP Grey, L Peng
– J Am Chem Soc
(2020)
142,
11173
Cesium Substitution Disrupts Concerted Cation Dynamics in Formamidinium Hybrid Perovskites
EM Mozur, MA Hope, JC Trowbridge, DM Halat, LL Daemen, AE Maughan, TR Prisk, CP Grey, JR Neilson
– Chemistry of Materials
(2020)
32,
6266
Stable Hexylphosphonate-Capped Blue-Emitting Quantum-Confined CsPbBr3Nanoplatelets
J Shamsi, D Kubicki, M Anaya, Y Liu, K Ji, K Frohna, CP Grey, RH Friend, SD Stranks
– ACS Energy Lett
(2020)
5,
1900
Superionic Lithium Intercalation through 2 x 2 nm2 Columns in the Crystallographic Shear Phase Nb18W8O69
KJ Griffith, CP Grey
– Chemistry of Materials
(2020)
32,
3860
Selective NMR observation of the SEI-metal interface by dynamic nuclear polarisation from lithium metal
MA Hope, BLD Rinkel, AB Gunnarsdóttir, K Märker, S Menkin, S Paul, IV Sergeyev, CP Grey
– Nat Commun
(2020)
11,
2224
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Research Group

Research Interest Groups

Email address

cpg27@cam.ac.uk