Dual-element substitution induced integrated defect structure to suppress voltage decay and capacity fading of Li-rich Mn-based cathode.

J Colloid Interface Sci

School of Materials Science and Engineering, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, PR China; School of Resources and Materials, Northeastern University at Qinhuangdao, Qinhuangdao 066004, PR China; Key Laboratory of Dielectric and Electrolyte Functional Material Hebei Province, Qinhuangdao, PR China.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Li-rich manganese-based oxide (LRMO) is a promising material for lithium-ion batteries due to its high energy density but faces challenges like voltage decay and capacity fading, hindering commercialization.
  • - A new method involving co-doping with Sn and Na creates integrated defects (oxygen vacancies, stacking faults, and a surface spinel phase) that improve voltage stability and cycling performance of LRMO.
  • - The modified NaSnO-1% sample shows impressive results with a capacity of 207 mAh/g and a capacity retention of 96.71% after 100 cycles, along with minimal voltage decay, showcasing the potential of dual-element substitution for enhancing LRMO performance.

Article Abstract

Li-rich manganese-based oxide (LRMO) is considered one of the most promising cathode materials for next-generation lithium-ion batteries due to its high energy density. However, many issues need to be addressed before its large-scale commercialization, including significant voltage decay and capacity fading. Herein, a Sn/Na co-doping induced integrated defect structure (oxygen vacancies, stacking faults, and surface spinel phase) strategy is proposed to suppress the voltage decay and enhance the cycling performance of LRMO. The integrated surface defect structures have significantly favorable effects on the LRMO, where the oxygen vacancies remove surface labile oxygen and suppress surface oxygen release, the induced stacking faults alleviate the stress accumulation during cycling, the surface spinel phase promotes the Li diffusion and prevents the outward migration of cations, and the co-doped Sn/Na stabilize the layered structure. As a result, the modified sample NaSnO-1 % (NSO-1) achieves excellent cycling performance (capacity of 207 mAh/g and capacity retention of 96.71 % after 100 cycles at 0.5C) and a smaller voltage decay (less than 1.5 mV per cycle) compared with the unmodified LRMO. This work provides a new valuable strategy to suppress capacity fading and voltage decay of LRMO through dual-element substitution induced surface defect engineering.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.08.078DOI Listing

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