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Characterization of Energy Materials with X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy-Advantages, Challenges, and Opportunities

Journal

ENERGY & FUELS
Volume 36, Issue 5, Pages 2369-2389

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.1c04072

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO)
  2. Swinburne University of Technology for a Women in STEM Fellowship
  3. Australian Research Council
  4. Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering (AINSE, Ltd.)
  5. James Cook University
  6. IMCRC
  7. Swinburne University of Technology for a Swinburne University Postgraduate Award (SUPRA)
  8. Australian Research Council through the Centre of Excellence in Electromaterials Science [CE140100012, FT200100317, DP200101878]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) plays a critical role in characterizing energy materials and can target distinct chemical environments within a material. This review outlines key questions that XAS experiments can answer, shows the complementarity of XAS with other analytical techniques, and discusses the future role of XAS in energy material innovations.
X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) plays a critical role in the characterization of energy materials, including thin-film electrocatalysts and battery materials. XAS is well-suited for this purpose because it is element-specific and can target distinct chemical environments within a material, even in a mixed or complicated matrix. Even so, some key energy materials are far from ideal XAS samples. This means that both sample preparation and experimental conditions need to be considered when collecting and interpreting data to ensure that conclusions are correct. This review outlines some of the key questions that an XAS experiment is well-suited to answering, including speciation of amorphous materials, understanding how multi-metal systems interact, and the different ways that we may observe single atoms. In addition, we show how XAS can be highly complementary to other analytical techniques in developing a full picture of a material over different scale bars. Importantly, we also examine instances where the sample matrix can distort XAS data, show an example where bond-length disorder can be confused with a change in the coordination number, and discuss some of the advantages and challenges of in situ electrocatalysis. Finally, we examine the future role that XAS will play in innovations in energy materials.

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