SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENT
Spectroscopy at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) and theoretical calculations at the Molecular Foundry revealed the intrinsic spectroscopic signature of lithium metal and explained the origin of previous contradictory reports.
SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT
The findings provide a benchmark for further studies of lithium compounds towards batteries with higher capacity and energy density.
The elusive electronic structure of lithium
Lithium-ion batteries are ubiquitous, yet their performance pales in comparison to that predicted of the long-sought holy grail—a battery with an anode of pure metallic lithium. After decades of study, practical constraints and a lack of fundamental understanding of lithium’s chemistry continue to prevent the full realization of its potential.
A combination of factors has plagued attempts to pin down lithium’s relevant electronic structure. First, metallic lithium is highly reactive and oxidizes almost immediately, contaminating results with data from lithium oxide. Previous studies have yielded contradictory results: K-edge x-ray absorption spectra of metallic lithium have differed significantly from the electron energy loss spectrum, which in turn has differed from the hard x-ray Raman spectrum. Second, although lithium K-edge absorption spectroscopy is the most direct way to probe the element’s electronic structure, it requires a very low x-ray energy range (55–65 eV) and very high energy resolution, a combination that is not commonly available at x-ray facilities. The non-trivial nature of spectroscopic probes of the very active alkali metals led to debates over 50 years ago, which were eventually clarified through careful experiments by Neville Smith, a former ALS science deputy, during his doctoral work.
In addition, despite being a metal, the small number of electrons per lithium atom leads to a stronger-than-expected many-body response to x-ray excitation—a phenomenon that is challenging to computationally model with popular methods. Furthermore, the precision and validity of the theoretical calculations have suffered from the lack of reliable experimental results, so it has been hard to achieve a quantitative level of comparison between the theory and experiment.
Now, using the ultra-high-resolution (<10 meV) soft x-rays offered by the ALS and novel theoretical approaches developed at the Molecular Foundry, researchers have uncovered new information about the electronic structure of lithium and explained the contradictions in previous studies.
Controlled experiments yield unexpected results
To investigate the K-edge absorption spectrum, the researchers used ALS Beamline 4.0.3 (MERLIN), which provides a high degree of sensitivity at the low energy range characteristic of the lithium K-edge. Two different in situ preparation methods—cleaving and evaporation in ultra-high vacuum (UHV)—were used to mitigate oxidation, allowing the team to measure the pristine metal.
The spectrum for the freshly cleaved sample showed a strong peak at 55.6 eV, which was either absent or severely suppressed in previous studies, most likely due to oxidation of lithium’s surface. The team continued to take measurements at regular intervals. After only 20 minutes in the UHV environment, features of Li2O began to appear, diminishing, and eventually obscuring, the peak associated with the freshly cleaved sample.
Novel theoretical calculations corroborate experiment
The oxygen contamination associated with real-world experiments shouldn’t be a problem in silico, but oddly, the absorption peak at 55.6 eV was also missing from previously reported theoretical predictions of pure lithium. These had relied on single-particle approaches based on density functional theory. To more accurately describe the x-ray excitation of lithium metal atoms’ core electrons, the researchers developed a new computational treatment that explicitly accounted for the many-body response of all valence electrons to the core excitation, and they were able to replicate the 55.6 eV peak. They found that the prominent peak contains significant contributions from multiple near-degenerate excitations, some of which are forbidden within a simplified single-particle framework.
The team extended their successful experimental and theoretical approaches to a series of lithium salts, establishing a solid benchmark of experimental spectra and quantitative theoretical calculations for studying lithium chemistry.
Contacts: Yi-De Chuang and David Prendergast
Researchers: S. Roychoudhury (ALS and Molecular Foundry); Z. Zhuo, R. Qiao, Y.-D. Chuang, and W. Yang (ALS); L. Wan (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory); Y. Liang and D. Prendergast (Molecular Foundry); and F. Pan (Peking University).
Funding: Laboratory Directed Research and Development program at Berkeley Lab, U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (BES) program. Operation of the ALS and Molecular Foundry are supported by DOE BES.
Publication: S. Roychoudhury, Z. Zhuo, R. Qiao, L. Wan, Y. Liang, F. Pan, Y.-D. Chuang, D. Prendergast, and W. Yang, “Controlled experiments and optimized theory of absorption spectra of Li metal and salts,” ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 13, 45488 (2021), doi:10.1021/acsami.1c11970.
ALS SCIENCE HIGHLIGHT #457