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Materials for sustainable energy

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Solid state ionics: functional materials and devices for electrochemical energy conversion and storage applications

This symposium will focus on recent developments in the field of solid-state functional materials with distinctive electronic and ionic transport properties and their interfaces, to develop the next generation of energy conversion technologies and smart devices for electronic applications.

Scope:

The development of solid-state materials with tailored electronic and ion transport properties is paramount for the optimization of state-of-the-art devices for energy conversion and storage (batteries, photovoltaics, fuel cells, gas sensors, membranes and electrolyzers) and smart devices like memristors providing routes for the development of next generation systems with improved performances.

The optimization of the performance of these devices is controlled by the mass and charge transport properties occurring at the bulk, interface and surface level of solid-state materials. It is, therefore, paramount to gain quantitative understanding of these processes to provide routes for rational design of ionic and/or mixed ionic-electronic conducting materials and optimized interface engineering. This symposium will focus on fundamental and applied aspects of solid-state ionic materials, covering new practices for theory and simulation of transport properties and materials discovery, recent experimental developments in synthesis and processing and novel advanced characterization techniques of functional materials and interfaces, including in situ and operando methodologies. In addition, for the implementation of innovative concepts into enhanced devices, new methodologies for engineering ionic and electronic transport in functional oxides will be discussed. The symposium will also serve as a platform to discuss sustainable and low-cost synthesis and fabrication routes, including the development of novel devices and the optimization of processing and fabrication tools. Some of the main applications and devices to be discussed will be electrolysis, photocatalysis, batteries, fuel cells, membranes, supercapacitors, memristors, thermoelectric and hybrid devices.

Hot topics to be covered by the symposium:

Papers are solicited on (but not limited to) the following topics:

  • Defect chemistry in functional oxides
  • Bulk electronic and ionic transport
  • Electro-Catalysis
  • Nanoionics: mass and charge transport in the nanoscale
  • Interfaces: solid/solid, solid/liquid and solid/gas
  • Methodologies for engineering ionic transport in functional materials
  • Advanced characterization tools of solid-state ionic materials
  • Advanced in situ/operando characterization tools of solid-state ionic materials and devices
  • Ion-assisted phenomena including iontronics, ferroelectrics, etc
  • Solid-state ionics applied to energy devices: batteries, fuel cells and electrolyzers
  • All-solid-state devices based on solid-state ionic materials: solid oxide fuel cells and electrolyzers, solid-state batteries, thermoelectric devices, memristors, gas sensors, oxide photovoltaic cells, etc.
  • Thin film based solid state devices

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Symposium organizers
Alexander K. OPITZTU Wien

Institute of Chemical Technologies and Analytics, Getreidemarkt 9/164-EC, Wien, Austria

alexander.opitz@tuwien.ac.at
Emma KENDRICKUniversity of Birmingham

School of Metallurgy and Materials, Edgbaston, B15 2TT, United Kingdom

e.kendrick@bham.ac.uk
Miguel LAGUNA-BERCERO (Main organizer)Institute of Nanoscience and Materials of Aragon, CSIC-Univ. Zaragoza

Ed. Torres Quevedo, c/ María de Luna 3, 50018 Zaragoza, Spain

malaguna@unizar.es
Sandrine RICOTEColorado School of Mines

1500 Illinois street, Golden, CO 80401, USA

sricote@mines.edu