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Abstract Solid-state electrolytes overcome many challenges of present-day lithium ion batteries, such as safety hazards and dendrite formation1,2. However, detailed understanding of the involved lithium dynamics is missing due to a lack of in operando measurements with chemical and interfacial specificity. Here we investigate a prototypical solid-state electrolyte using linear and nonlinear extreme-ultraviolet spectroscopies. Leveraging the surface sensitivity of extreme-ultraviolet-second-harmonic-generation spectroscopy, we obtained a direct spectral signature of surface lithium ions, showing a distinct blueshift relative to bulk absorption spectra. First-principles simulations attributed the shift to transitions from the lithium 1 sstate to hybridized Li-s/Ti-dorbitals at the surface. Our calculations further suggest a reduction in lithium interfacial mobility due to suppressed low-frequency rattling modes, which is the fundamental origin of the large interfacial resistance in this material. Our findings pave the way for new optimization strategies to develop these electrochemical devices via interfacial engineering of lithium ions.more » « less
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Uzundal, Can B.; Jamnuch, Sasawat; Berger, Emma; Woodahl, Clarisse; Manset, Paul; Hirata, Yasuyuki; Sumi, Toshihide; Amado, Angelique; Akai, Hisazumi; Kubota, Yuya; et al (, Physical Review Letters)
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Jacobse, Peter_H; Sarker, Mamun; Saxena, Anshul; Zahl, Percy; Wang, Ziyi; Berger, Emma; Aluru, Narayana_R; Sinitskii, Alexander; Crommie, Michael_F (, Small)Abstract Carbon‐based quantum dots (QDs) enable flexible manipulation of electronic behavior at the nanoscale, but controlling their magnetic properties requires atomically precise structural control. While magnetism is observed in organic molecules and graphene nanoribbons (GNRs), GNR precursors enabling bottom‐up fabrication of QDs with various spin ground states have not yet been reported. Here the development of a new GNR precursor that results in magnetic QD structures embedded in semiconducting GNRs is reported. Inserting one such molecule into the GNR backbone and graphitizing it results in a QD region hosting one unpaired electron. QDs composed of two precursor molecules exhibit nonmagnetic, antiferromagnetic, or antiferromagnetic ground states, depending on the structural details that determine the coupling behavior of the spins originating from each molecule. The synthesis of these QDs and the emergence of localized states are demonstrated through high‐resolution atomic force microscopy (HR‐AFM), scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) imaging, and spectroscopy, and the relationship between QD atomic structure and magnetic properties is uncovered. GNR QDs provide a useful platform for controlling the spin‐degree of freedom in carbon‐based nanostructures.more » « less
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Berger, Emma; Jamnuch, Sasawat; Uzundal, Can B.; Woodahl, Clarisse; Padmanabhan, Hari; Amado, Angelique; Manset, Paul; Hirata, Yasuyuki; Kubota, Yuya; Owada, Shigeki; et al (, Nano Letters)
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