Helping to Expand the Horizon for
Lithium-Ion Batteries
Chemical Engineering student expands family of composite electrode materials
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Becky Ward excels in sports as well as academics.
A soccer defender at McDaniel College, Ward was named to the "ESPN
the Magazine" Academic All-District II First Team. Photo by David
Sinclair. |
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Rebecca Ward joined Argonne in the summer of 2005 between her junior and
senior years at McDaniel College, a liberal arts college in suburban Maryland.
Becky was a double major—physics and chemistry—and had aspirations to work in
the field of nuclear chemistry. She chose nuclear chemistry early on, having
been strongly influenced as a freshman by seminar courses on nuclear power and
waste issues.
Wanting more experience and laboratory work to help her get into graduate
school, she applied for the U.S. Department of Energy's Science Undergraduate
Laboratory Internships, or SULI, program. Her only other research experience was
as a Research Experiences for Undergraduates (National Science Foundation)
student the previous summer at Wellesley College studying Bose-Einstein
condensates.
In Argonne's Chemical Engineering Division, Becky was assigned to work on two
different projects within the Battery Technology Department's Materials Research
Group. Initially a project on coating metallic electrodes to control surface
chemistry was used to teach her the basics of cell building and electrochemical
characterization. Once these techniques were mastered, she started her second
project examining composites between olivine (e.g., LiFePO4)
structures and spinel (e.g., LiMn2O4) or layered (e.g.,
LiCoO2) structures. These are the three main classes of materials
used in lithium ion batteries. The battery materials group had identified a
series of composite materials based on spinels and layered materials that are of
significant interest to industry. Becky’s project was an attempt to expand that
work to include olivine type materials.
Her approach to synthesizing the olivine materials utilized three different
routes – high temperature calcination, ball-milling, and a low-temperature
coating method. Even though the optimal candidate materials were used, the
complexity of the reaction mixtures made it difficult to isolate the desired
product. Becky persisted, however, and after further analysis, the
low-temperature coating method was modified to make the desired composite
materials. These materials were very stable, with good electrochemical cycling.
Initial characterization of the materials showed that they are very promising.
According to Becky's supervisor, materials chemist Jack Vaughey, “Becky did a
great job, in part due to her outstanding organizational skills and
determination. When initial reactions didn’t go as hoped, she persisted until
the problem was solved. For this olivine composite project, we still are working
on the same types of materials she initially developed, but taking it in a
slightly different direction to optimize the desired properties. Becky’s efforts
were definitely a cornerstone of some of our future efforts.”
Becky says that in addition to the technical skills that she took away from
Argonne, she learned a lot about the scientific community and enjoyed the
atmosphere of a national laboratory, where everyone was focused on research and
interested in collaboration. This was not her first experience in an R&D
setting; she also completed an internship at the National Institute of Standards
and Technology working on a dosimetry project earlier in her undergraduate
studies.
DOE/SULI interns are required to submit a final report on their work
projects. Typically, DOE chooses only 15 papers from the entire SULI program for
publishing to its Journal of Undergraduate Research. Becky's report was one of
them. As an additional honor she was awarded by DOE an all-expenses-paid trip to
the 2006 American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) meeting held
in St Louis in February. Her poster was one of only 10 selected for display at
the AAAS meeting. Becky says that she "was extremely honored to be selected from
such a talented pool of students. The experience of attending the AAAS meeting
was invaluable in terms of networking and developing a better understanding of
scientific communication."
As for the future, Becky certainly has options. She has been accepted to five
PhD programs for physical chemistry or chemical physics, and says she is leaning
toward nuclear chemistry.
This work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy, FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies program.
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