English

Ultrafast lithium diffusion in bilayer graphene

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2017-09-11 v1 Materials Science Chemical Physics

Abstract

Solid mixed conductors with significant ionic as well as electronic conduction play a pivotal role for mass transfer and storage as required in battery electrodes. Single-phase materials with simultaneously high electronic and ionic conductivity at room temperature are hard to come by and therefore multi-phase systems with separate ion and electron channels have been put forward instead. Here, we explore bilayer graphene as a true single phase mixed conductor and demonstrate ultrafast lithium diffusion exceeding diffusion in bulk graphite by an order of magnitude and even surpassing diffusion of sodium chloride in liquid water. To this end, an innovative electrochemical cell architecture has been developed where the redox-reaction forcing lithium intercalation is localized at a protrusion of the device only. Its remainder consists of pristine bilayer graphene unperturbed by an electrolyte. The geometry lends itself to the use of magnetotransport machinery known from mesoscopic low-dimensional physics. Time dependent Hall measurements across spatially displaced Hall probes deliver a direct view on the in-plane diffusion kinetics. The device layout with a perimeterial electrochemical cell is transferable to other 2D materials as well as thin films and may promote a paradigm shift on the use of electrolytes in on-chip experiments.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1701.02399,
  title  = {Ultrafast lithium diffusion in bilayer graphene},
  author = {M. Kühne and F. Paolucci and J. Popovic and P. M. Ostrovsky and J. Maier and J. H. Smet},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1701.02399},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

main text 18 pages including 5 figures; supplementary information 7 pages including 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T17:45:26.511Z