The ever‐increasing demand for stationary energy storage has driven the prosperous investigation of low‐cost sodium ion batteries. The inferior long‐term cycling stability of cathode materials is a significant roadblock toward the wide commercialization of sodium ion batteries. This study enlightens a path toward empowering stable sodium ion batteries through incisive diagnostics of the multiscale surface chemical processes in layered oxide materials (e.g., O3‐NaNi1/3Fe1/3Mn1/3O2). The major challenges are unraveled in a promising sodium layered cathode material using a range of complementary advanced spectroscopic and imaging diagnostic techniques. It is discovered that the cathode–electrolyte interfacial reaction triggers transition metal reduction, heterogeneous surface reconstruction, metal dissolution, and formation of intragranular nanocracks. These surface chemistry driven processes are partly responsible for significant performance decay. This diagnostic study also rationalizes the elemental substitution and surface passivation methods that are widely applied in the field. The prepassivated and Ti‐substituted cathode materials allow for significantly improved cycling stability by inhibiting the metal dissolution. Therefore, incisively diagnosing the interfacial chemistry not only creates scientific insights into understanding sodium cathode chemistry, but also represents an advance toward establishing universal interfacial design principles for all alkali metal ion cathode materials.
Nickel-rich layered transition metal oxides, LiNi (MnCo) O (1-x ≥ 0.5), are appealing candidates for cathodes in next-generation lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) for electric vehicles and other large-scale applications, due to their high capacity and low cost. However, synthetic control of the structural ordering in such a complex quaternary system has been a great challenge, especially in the presence of high Ni content. Herein, synthesis reactions for preparing layered LiNi Mn Co O (NMC71515) by solid-state methods are investigated through a combination of time-resolved in situ high-energy X-ray diffraction and absorption spectroscopy measurements. The real-time observation reveals a strong temperature dependence of the kinetics of cationic ordering in NMC71515 as a result of thermal-driven oxidation of transition metals and lithium/oxygen loss that concomitantly occur during heat treatment. Through synthetic control of the kinetic reaction pathway, a layered NMC71515 with low cationic disordering and a high reversible capacity is prepared in air. The findings may help to pave the way for designing high-Ni layered oxide cathodes for LIBs.
The use of renewable electricity to prepare materials and fuels from abundant molecules offers a tantalizing opportunity to address concerns over energy and materials sustainability. The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is integral to nearly all material and fuel electrosyntheses. However, very little is known about the structural evolution of the OER electrocatalyst, especially the amorphous layer that forms from the crystalline structure. Here, we investigate the interfacial transformation of the SrIrO3 OER electrocatalyst. The SrIrO3 amorphization is initiated by the lattice oxygen redox, a step that allows Sr2+ to diffuse and O2− to reorganize the SrIrO3 structure. This activation turns SrIrO3 into a highly disordered Ir octahedral network with Ir square-planar motif. The final SryIrOx exhibits a greater degree of disorder than IrOx made from other processing methods. Our results demonstrate that the structural reorganization facilitated by coupled ionic diffusions is essential to the disordered structure of the SrIrO3 electrocatalyst.
Batteries with conversion-type electrodes exhibit higher energy storage density but suffer much severer capacity fading than those with the intercalation-type electrodes. The capacity fading has been considered as the result of contact failure between the active material and the current collector, or the breakdown of solid electrolyte interphase layer. Here, using a combination of synchrotron X-ray absorption spectroscopy and in situ transmission electron microscopy, we investigate the capacity fading issue of conversion-type materials by studying phase evolution of iron oxide composited structure during later-stage cycles, which is found completely different from its initial lithiation. The accumulative internal passivation phase and the surface layer over cycling enforce a rate−limiting diffusion barrier for the electron transport, which is responsible for the capacity degradation and poor rate capability. This work directly links the performance with the microscopic phase evolution in cycled electrode materials and provides insights into designing conversion-type electrode materials for applications.
Dual metal-organic frameworks (MOFs, i.e., MIL-100(Fe) and ZIF-8) are thermally converted into Fe-Fe 3 C-embedded Fe-N-codoped carbon as platinum group metal (PGM)-free oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) electrocatalysts. Pyrolysis enables imidazolate in ZIF-8 rearranged into highly N-doped carbon, while Fe from MIL-100(Fe) into N-ligated atomic sites concurrently with a few Fe-Fe 3 C nanoparticles. Upon precise control of MOF compositions, the optimal catalyst is highly active for the ORR in half-cells (0.88 V in base and 0.79 V versus RHE in acid in half-wave potential), a proton exchange membrane fuel cell (0.76 W cm −2 in peak power density) and an aprotic Li-O 2 battery (8749 mAh g −1 in discharge capacity), representing a state-of-the-art PGM-free ORR catalyst. In the material, amorphous carbon with partial graphitization ensures high active site exposure and fast charge transfer simultaneously. Macropores facilitate mass transport to the catalyst surface, followed by oxygen penetration in micropores to reach the infiltrated active sites. Further modeling simulations shed light on the true Fe-Fe 3 C contribution to the catalyst performance, suggesting Fe 3 C enhances oxygen affinity, while metallic Fe promotes *OH desorption as the rate-determining step at the nearby Fe-N-C sites. These findings demonstrate MOFs as model system for rational design of electrocatalyst for energy-based functional applications.
Anion redox in lithium transition metal oxides such as Li 2 RuO 3 and Li 2 MnO 3, has catalyzed intensive research efforts to find transition metal oxides with anion redox that may boost the energy density of lithium-ion batteries. The physical origin of observed anion redox remains debated, and more direct experimental evidence is needed. In this work, we have shown electronic signatures of oxygen-oxygen coupling, direct evidence central to lattice oxygen redox (O 2− / (O 2 ) n− ), in charged Li 2-x RuO 3 after Ru oxidation (Ru 4+ /Ru 5+ ) upon first-electron removal with lithium de-intercalation. Experimental Ru L 3 -edge high-energy-resolution fluorescence detected X-ray absorption spectra (HERFD-XAS), supported by ab-initio simulations, revealed that the increased intensity in the high-energy shoulder upon lithium de-intercalation resulted from increased O-O coupling, inducing (O-O) σ*-like states with π overlap with Ru d-manifolds, in agreement with O K-edge XAS spectra. Experimental and simulated O K-edge X-ray emission spectra (XES) further supported this observation with the broadening of the oxygen non-bonding feature upon charging, also originated from (O-O) σ* states. This lattice oxygen redox of Li 2-x RuO 3 was accompanied by a small amount of O 2 evolution in the first charge from *
Nickel-rich transition-metal (TM) layered oxides, particularly those with high Ni content, attract worldwide interest for potential use as high-capacity cathodes in next-generation Li-ion batteries. However, as Ni loading increases, Li and Ni sitting at octahedra tend to mix, resulting in reduced electrochemical activity, which has been one major obstacle to their practical applications. Herein, we investigate the kinetic and thermodynamic aspects of Li/Ni mixing in LiNi0.7Mn x Co0.3–x O2 (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.3) as they are synthesized, through quantitative determination of structural ordering and comparison to ab initio calculations. Results from this study elucidate the role of Co/Mn-substitution in tuning Li/Ni ordering, intrinsically through local magnetic interaction. Specifically, Co substitution facilitates Li/Ni ordering by relieving the intra-plane magnetic frustration and reducing the inter-plane super-exchange (SE) interaction; in contrast, Mn exacerbates magnetic frustration and strengthens SE, thereby aggravating Li/Ni mixing. These findings highlight the interplay between local magnetic interaction and cationic ordering, which has yet to be fully investigated for the needs of designing high-Ni layered cathodes and, broadly, TM-based oxides for various applications.
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