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Creators/Authors contains: "Li, Christopher Y"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 2, 2026
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 25, 2026
  3. In the absence of experimental data of fully developed hierarchical 3D sodium solid-state batteries, we developed an improved continuum model by relying on Machine Learning-assisted parameter fitting to uncover the intrinsic material properties that can be transferred into different battery models. The electrochemical system simulated has sodium metal P2-type Na2/3[Ni1/3Fe1/12Mn7/12]O2(NNFMO) as the cathode material, paired with two types of electrolytes viz, the organic liquid electrolyte and a solid polymer electrolyte. We implemented a 1D continuum model in COMSOL to suit both liquid and solid electrolytes, then used a Gaussian Process Regressor to fit and evaluate the electrochemical parameters in both battery systems. To enhance the generalizability of our model, the liquid cell and solid cell models share the same OCV input for the cathode materials. The resulting parameters are well aligned with their physical meaning and literature values. The continuum model is then used to understand the effect of increasing the thickness of the cathode and current density by analyzing the cathode utilization, and the overpotentials arising from transport and charge transfer. This 1D model and the parameter set are ready to be used in a 3D battery architecture design. 
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  4. Abstract Single crystals that do not obey translational symmetry have been reported in various material systems. In polymers, twisted crystals are typically formed in banded spherulites, while a class of non‐flat polymer single crystals (PSCs) has been observed. Herein, we report the formation of scrolled single crystals of biodegradable polymer poly(L‐lactic acid) (PLLA). While classical 2‐dimensional single crystals formed in solution‐crystallized PLLA are flat, we show that PLLA crystals bend into scrolls when the polymer molecular weight is low. The formation of these unique scrolled PLLA single crystals depends on polymer chain ends and the polymer molecular weight. This work, therefore, demonstrates a new mechanism to break translational symmetry in PSC growth. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 3, 2026