ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
Filtering by
- All Subjects: Mechanical Engineering
- Creators: Yu, Hongbin
materials for lithium-based batteries: silicon (Si) and metal lithium (Li). It will focus on
studying the mechanical behaviors of the two materials during charge and discharge and
understanding how these mechanical behaviors may affect their electrochemical
performance.
In the first part, amorphous Si anode will be studied. Despite many existing studies
on silicon (Si) anodes for lithium ion batteries (LIBs), many essential questions still exist
on compound formation, composition, and properties. Here it is shown that some
previously accepted findings do not truthfully reflect the actual lithiation mechanisms in
realistic battery configurations. Furthermore the correlation between structure and
mechanical properties in these materials has not been properly established. Here, a rigorous
and thorough study is performed to comprehensively understand the electrochemical
reaction mechanisms of amorphous-Si (a-Si) in a realistic LIB configuration. In-depth
microstructural characterization was performed and correlations were established between
Li-Si composition, volumetric expansion, and modulus/hardness. It is found that the
lithiation process of a-Si in a real battery setup is a single-phase reaction rather than the
accepted two-phase reaction obtained from in-situ TEM experiments. The findings in this
dissertation establish a reference to quantitatively explain many key metrics for lithiated a
Si as anodes in real LIBs, and can be used to rationally design a-Si based high-performance
LIBs guided by high-fidelity modeling and simulations.
In the second part, Li metal anode will be investigated. Problems related to dendrite
growth on lithium metal anodes such as capacity loss and short circuit present major
barriers to the next-generation high-energy-density batteries. The development of
successful mitigation strategies is impeded by the incomplete understanding of the Li
dendrite growth mechanisms. Here the enabling role of plating residual stress in dendrite
initiation through novel experiments of Li electrodeposition on soft substrates is confirmed,
and the observations is explained with a stress-driven dendrite growth model. Dendrite
growth is mitigated on such soft substrates through surface-wrinkling-induced stress
relaxation in deposited Li film. It is demonstrated that this new dendrite mitigation
mechanism can be utilized synergistically with other existing approaches in the form of
three-dimensional (3D) soft scaffolds for Li plating, which achieves superior coulombic
efficiency over conventional hard copper current collectors under large current density.
On the other hand, high pressure, temperatures that can reach boiling, and the pH of different hot springs ranging from <2 to >9 make hot spring ecosystem a unique environment that is difficult to study. WSN allows many scientific studies in harsh environments that are not feasible with traditional instrumentation. However, wireless pH sensing for long time in situ data collection is still challenging for two reasons. First, the existing commercial-off-the-shelf pH meters are frequent calibration dependent; second, biofouling causes significant measurement error and drift. In this work, 2-dimentional graphene pH sensors were studied and calibration free graphene pH sensor prototypes were fabricated. Test result shows the resistance of the fabricated device changes linearly with the pH values (in the range of 3-11) in the surrounding liquid environment. Field tests show graphene layer greatly prevented the microbial fouling. Therefore, graphene pH sensors are promising candidates that can be effectively used for wireless pH sensing in exploration of hot spring ecosystems.
This dissertation first discusses the use of gold nanowires as narrow-band selective metamaterial absorbers. An investigation into plasmonic localized heating indicated that film-coupled gold nanoparticles exhibit tunable selective absorption based on the size of the nanoparticles. By using anodized aluminum oxide templates, aluminum nanodisc narrow-band absorbers were fabricated. A metrology instrument to measure the reflectance and transmittance of micro-scale samples was also developed and used to measure the reflectance of the aluminum nanodisc absorbers (220 µm diameter area). Tuning of the resonance wavelengths of these absorbers can be achieved through changing their geometry. Broadband absorption can be achieved by using a combination of geometries for these metamaterials which would facilitate their use as solar absorbers.
Recently, solar energy harvesting has become a topic of considerable research investigation due to it being an environmentally conscious alternative to fossil fuels. The next section discusses the steady-state temperature measurement of a lab-scale multilayer solar absorber, named metafilm. A lab-scale experimental setup is developed to characterize the solar thermal performance of selective solar absorbers. Under a concentration factor of 20.3 suns, a steady-state temperature of ~500 degrees Celsius was achieved for the metafilm compared to 375 degrees Celsius for a commercial black absorber under the same conditions. Thermal durability testing showed that the metafilm could withstand up to 700 degrees Celsius in vacuum conditions and up to 400 degrees Celsius in atmospheric conditions with little degradation of its optical and radiative properties. Moreover, cost analysis of the metafilm found it to cost significantly less ($2.22 per square meter) than commercial solar coatings ($5.41-100 per square meter).
Finally, this dissertation concludes with recommendations for further studies like using these selective metamaterials and metafilms as absorbers and emitters and using the aluminum nanodiscs on glass as selective filters for photovoltaic cells to enhance solar thermophotovoltaic energy conversion.
‘ori’ meaning folding, and ‘kami’ meaning paper is the art of paper folding. Kirigami, from ‘kiri’ meaning cutting, is the art of the combination of paper cutting and paper folding. In this dissertation, Origami and kirigami concepts were successively utilized in making stretchable lithium ion batteries and three-dimensional (3D) silicon structure which both provide excellent mechanical characteristics.
The main objective of this work is to experimentally study the near-field radiative transfer and the excitation of resonance modes by designing nanostructured thin films separated by nanometer vacuum gaps. In particular, the near-field radiative heat transfer between two parallel plates of intrinsic silicon wafers coated with a thin film of aluminum nanostructure is investigated. In addition, theoretical studies about the effects of different physical mechanisms such as SPhP/SPP, MPs, and HM on near-field radiative transfer in various nanostructured metamaterials are conducted particularly for near-field TPV applications. Numerical simulations are performed by using multilayer transfer matrix method, rigorous coupled wave analysis, and finite difference time domain techniques incorporated with fluctuational electrodynamics. The understanding gained here will undoubtedly benefit the spectral control of near-field thermal radiation for energy-harvesting applications like thermophotovoltaic energy conversion and radiation-based thermal management.