Insights into the enhanced cycling stability of cobalt-free single-crystal layered oxide cathodes at elevated voltage

Abstract

Co-free single-crystal cathodes Li(NixMn1−x)O2 have been proposed as promising candidates due to remarkable thermal stability and low cost. Unfortunately, insufficient in-depth understanding on the failure mechanisms hinders the development of these cathodes. Here, we compare the electrochemical performance of two model materials, that are, single-crystal cathodes LiNi0.6Mn0.4O2 (NM64) and LiNi0.8Mn0.2O2 (NM82) under the same SOC (rather than the same cut-off voltage) in order to shed light on the capacity fading mechanism of Li(NixMn1−x)O2 from a different point of view. By modulating the SOC, we find that NM82 undergoes faster capacity decline than NM64, even when its cut-off voltage is lower (4.5 V for NM82 and 4.6 V for NM64). The more serious Li/Ni mixing in NM64 helps mitigate its anisotropic lattice contraction, while the more highly active Ni4+ ions in NM82 induce serious irreversible phase transition, more serious loss of lattice oxygen and undesirable reactions. This work highlights that the damage of “high” voltage should be re-assessed together with other factors, such as anisotropic lattice contraction and the amount of highly reactive Ni4+. And developing high voltage single-crystal Li(NixMn1−xO2) cathodes with moderate Ni content is an effective route towards high stability Co-free single-crystal cathodes with a low cost.

Graphical abstract: Insights into the enhanced cycling stability of cobalt-free single-crystal layered oxide cathodes at elevated voltage

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
31 Mar 2024
Accepted
21 Apr 2024
First published
22 Apr 2024

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2024, Advance Article

Insights into the enhanced cycling stability of cobalt-free single-crystal layered oxide cathodes at elevated voltage

T. Liu, K. Fan, C. Chen, M. Dong, Y. Zhu, G. Chen, J. Li, Z. Lin, L. Li, Y. Zhu, H. Li and H. Huang, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4TA02135E

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