Abstract
LixMn1 − yCoyO2
compounds were synthesised by a low temperature route involving ion exchange
from sodium precursors. Neutron diffraction confirmed that the structures
are layered (space group R
m). Materials
synthesised from the precursors by ion exchange using LiBr in ethanol at 80 °C
possess vacancies on the transition metal sites which pin residual Na+
ions. Such transition metal vacancies and Na+ ions are not
observed on refluxing at 160 °C in hexanol. We show that lithium
intercalation accompanies the ion exchange process. The presence of Na+
in the Li+ layered materials induces disorder perpendicular
to the layers and this has been modelled. The performance of the materials
depends on the ion exchange conditions. The y = 0.025
compound obtained in ethanol exhibits a particularly high capacity to cycle
lithium. The initial discharge capacity is 200 mA h g−1
with a fade rate of only 0.08% per charge/discharge cycle on extended
cycling. This performance is delivered despite conversion to a spinel-like
phase during cycling and is markedly superior to the cycling ability of directly
prepared spinels over a similar composition range.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Inorganic Solids - Properties and Possibilities: Materials Discussion 3
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