Issue 5, 2020

Multiorbital bond formation for stable oxygen-redox reaction in battery electrodes

Abstract

High-energy-density batteries have been a long-standing target toward sustainability, but the energy density of state-of-the-art lithium-ion batteries is limited in part by the small capacity of the positive electrode materials. Although employing the additional oxygen-redox reaction of Li-excess transition-metal oxides is an attractive approach to increase the capacity, an atomic-level understanding of the reaction mechanism has not been established so far. Here, using bulk-sensitive resonant inelastic X-ray scattering spectroscopy combined with ab initio computations, we demonstrate the presence of a localized oxygen 2p orbital weakly hybridized with transition metal t2g orbitals that was theoretically predicted to play a key role in oxygen-redox reactions. After oxygen oxidation, the hole in the oxygen 2p orbital is stabilized by the generation of either a (σ + π) multiorbital bond through strong π back-donation or peroxide O22− through oxygen dimerization. The multiorbital bond formation with σ-accepting and π-donating transition metals can thus lead to reversible oxygen-redox reaction.

Graphical abstract: Multiorbital bond formation for stable oxygen-redox reaction in battery electrodes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Dec 2019
Accepted
10 Mar 2020
First published
12 Mar 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Energy Environ. Sci., 2020,13, 1492-1500

Multiorbital bond formation for stable oxygen-redox reaction in battery electrodes

T. Sudayama, K. Uehara, T. Mukai, D. Asakura, X. Shi, A. Tsuchimoto, B. Mortemard de Boisse, T. Shimada, E. Watanabe, Y. Harada, M. Nakayama, M. Okubo and A. Yamada, Energy Environ. Sci., 2020, 13, 1492 DOI: 10.1039/C9EE04197D

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