Low-temperature synthesis and electrochemical lithium intercalation behaviour of defect Li-Mn-O spinel oxide
Abstract
Disordered spinel phases with composition Li≈ 0.35MnO2 –δ·nH2O have been obtained by room-temperature aqueous oxidation of Mn±2 in LiOH medium. A thermogravimetric study shows that this phase can be dehydrated and reversibly exchanges oxygen in the temperature range 250–500 °C. The anhydrous product obtained by annealing at 300 °C in oxygen is a defect spinel with stoichiometry Li 0.70.Mn2O4. Its electrochemical behaviour in lithium cells shows improved capacity retention on charge-discharge cycling compared to high-temperature, stoichiometric LiMn2O4. This difference is attributed to the small grain size (in the 0.1 µm scale) and structural disorder, which favour the electrolyte–electrode material contact and lithium diffusion in the low-temperature phase.