Suppressing the Voltage Decay Based on a Distinct Stacking Sequence of Oxygen Atoms for Li-Rich Cathode Materials.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

National Base for International Science & Technology Cooperation, National Local Joint Engineering Laboratory for Key Materials of New Energy Storage Battery, Hunan Province Key Laboratory of Electrochemical Energy Storage & Conversion, School of Chemistry, Xiangtan University, Xiangtan 411105, China.

Published: April 2021

Li-rich cathode materials possess a much higher theoretical energy density than all intercalated cathode materials currently reported and thus are considered as the most promising candidate for next-generation high-energy density Li-ion batteries. However, the rapid voltage decay and the irreversible phase transition of O3-type Li-rich cathode materials often lessen their actual energy density and limit their practical applications, and thus, effectively suppressing the voltage decay of Li-rich cathodes becomes the hotspot of the current research. Herein, the F-doped O2-type Li-rich cathode materials LiMnNiCoOF (F-O2-LRO) are designed and prepared based on the P2-type sodium-ion cathode materials NaLi(MnNiCo)O (Na-LRO) by ion exchange. It has been found that the as-prepared F-O2-LRO exhibits excellent electrochemical performance, for example, a high discharge specific capacity of 280 mA h g at 0.1 C with an initial Coulombic efficiency of 94.4%, which is obviously higher than the original LRO (77.2%). After 100 cycles, the F-O2-LRO cathode can still maintain a high capacity retention of 95% at a rate of 1 C, while the capacity retention of the original LRO is only 69.1% at the same current rate. Furthermore, the voltage difference (Δ) of F-O2-LRO before and after cycling is only 0.268 V after 100 cycles at 1 C, which is less than that of the LRO cathode (0.681 V), indicating much lower polarization. Besides, even at a high current rate of 5 C, F-O2-LRO still displays a satisfactory discharge capacity of 210 mA h g with a capacity retention of 90.1% after 100 cycles. Therefore, this work put forward a new strategy for the development and industrial application of Li-rich cathode materials in high-energy Li-ion batteries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.1c02424DOI Listing

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