Showing 77–80 of 82 results

  • Placeholder

    Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) in Solid-State Battery Development – A Novel and Cost-Effective Approach

    Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) is a method widely used across industry to deposit a very thin layer of a material on a surface to alter its properties. The technique has been utilized in various areas of battery research, including solid-state batteries.

    A key challenge with solid state batteries is the high impedance at the interface between the cathode and the electrolyte. PVD is ideally suited to develop model systems to study and look to improve this problem.

    PVD also allows high throughput screening of different materials to accelerate new composition developments with enhanced electrochemical properties.

    The HEX series of PVD instruments has some key benefits for battery research. It is a cost-effective solution that is mounted below an existing glovebox, allowing continued use of the glovebox for other purposes and easy access to the vacuum chamber for modification and cleaning. The highly modular nature allows configuration changes without specialist tools, enabling changes in research direction without additional costs.

    This webinar will focus on the following key topics:

    • PVD techniques are a valuable tool in a wide spectrum of battery research
    • Develop model systems to study interfacial phenomena
    • High throughput screening of different materials to accelerate new composition developments with enhanced electrochemical properties
    • Introduction to the HEX series of PVD instrument and its unique advantages for research

    Presenter
    Dr. Jessica Stoner – Product Manager

    Jess is the Product Manager for the HEX series at Korvus Technology. She manages all technical aspects of the HEX both behind the scenes and in direct contact with users new and old. Before joining Korvus in 2021, she worked as a researcher at the Materials Innovation Factory at the University of Liverpool.

    Korvus Technology is a proud sponsor of this event.

    Buy Now
  • Placeholder

    Advancements in Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) for Battery Research

    Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) is used industrially for depositing nanometers-to-microns of a material to produce functional layers/alter surface properties. The technique is paramount in pioneering the development of solid-state/lithium-ion batteries.

    Key solid-state challenges are impedance at the cathode-electrolyte interface, volumetric energy density, and dendrites/crack formation during cycling. PVD is ideally suited to manufacturing promising solutions, whilst allowing high-throughput screening of novel material compositions to enhance electrochemical properties.

    The HEX is a cost-effective system, mountable beneath an existing glovebox for fully inert development. The unique configuration maximizes glovebox space and enables easy atmosphere-side modification/cleaning. The high modularity facilitates changes without specialist tools, enabling rapid changes in research approach without additional costs. Integration of sputtering/thermal/e-beam/organic evaporation/substrate heating allows extensive material production capabilities.

    This webinar will focus on the following key topics:

    • PVD techniques used to produce functional layers/alter surface properties
    • Development of model systems to study interfacial phenomena
    • High throughput screening of novel materials to enhance electrochemical properties
    • Introduction to the HEX series of PVD instrument and its key advantages for research, including unique mounting position below the glovebox

    Presenter
    Dr. Bryan Stuart – Head of R&D, Korvus Technology

    Bryan Stuart has over 10 years of experience in the development of next generation Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) technologies for enhancing manufacturing capabilities in Energy Storage applications from Solar Cells to Solid State Batteries. He leads R&D at Korvus Technologies as they seek to broaden and scale their product range.

    Korvus Technology is a proud sponsor of this event.

    Buy Now
  • Placeholder

    A New Generation of Aging Models for Lithium-ion Batteries

    Over the past years, scientists have invested a lot of time and resources to optimize semi-empirical, physico-chemical, and data-driven simulation models. All of them show different challenges and limitations. To overcome this dead end, scientists and engineers combine physicochemical-mechanical degradation effects and integrate them into (semi)-empirical as well as data-driven approaches. We call this combination physics-motivated semi-empirical aging models.

    This webinar will focus on the following key topics:

    • How capacity aging model is optimized using bootstrap resampling
    • The new generation of physics-motivated semi-empirical aging models: OCV aging, degradation modes, understanding the accuracy of models, simulation of swelling force
    • The new TWAICE simulation model portfolio: base model, customized base model, premium model
    • Vision and outlook

    Presenters
    Dr. Michael Baumann – Co-CEO at TWAICE
    Lennart Hinrichs – Executive VP & GM Americas at TWAICE

    Dr. Michael Baumann is Co-CEO at TWAICE. Before founding TWAICE with Dr. Stephan Rohr, Michael completed his Ph.D. at the Technical University of Munich. Michael’s battery specific domain expertise derives from over 6 years of academic research in Harvard, Berkeley, and Singapore, into Li-ion batteries with a particular focus on the Electric-thermal modelling and prediction of aging behavior for lithium-ion batteries.

    Lennart Hinrichs is currently driving forward the commercial side of TWAICE, with a particular focus on sales and the market strategy. Lennart worked in strategy consulting, driving the business model development and go-to-market strategy in industries ranging from consumer goods to telecommunications and automotive.

    TWAICE is a proud sponsor of this event.

    Buy Now
  • Placeholder

    Failure Analysis of Next Generation Si Based Anodes

    Silicon (Si) is an attractive alternative to graphite due to its high theoretical capacity of 3500 mAh-g-1 and its high abundance on earth. Unfortunately, Si is plagued by significant volume expansion during charge/discharge, upwards of 300%. As a result, researchers and companies have focused their attention on mitigating the disadvantages of Si. With various methods the aim is to create a Si based anode that has a stability comparable or better then graphite. With increasing interest, it is important to discuss and determine abuse testing and failure analysis techniques that can effectively determine the durability of these new anodes.

    This webinar will focus on the following key topics:

    • Why is it important to look at alternative anodes to graphite?
    • The advantages and disadvantages of Si based anodes
    • Creation of new anodes to alleviate the disadvantages of Si
    • Customized abuse testing and failure analysis of Si based anode cells

    Presenter
    Emily Klein – Materials Scientist and Engineer at Energy Assurance

    Emily Klein is a materials scientist and engineer at Energy Assurance. She earned her bachelor and master’s degrees in materials science and engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech). At Energy Assurance she supports clients with tailored abuse testing, cell and pack quality evaluations, and failure analysis. Prior to joining Energy Assurance, her research at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and Georgia Tech was focused on materials selection, performance testing, and safety testing for lithium-ion, solid-state systems, lithium metal systems, and alloy anodes.

    Energy Assurance is a proud sponsor of this event.

    Buy Now