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1.
Inorg Chem ; 60(24): 19022-19034, 2021 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34870428

ABSTRACT

Li-rich rocksalt oxides are promising candidates as high-energy density cathode materials for next-generation Li-ion batteries because they present extremely diverse structures and compositions. Most reported materials in this family contain as many cations as anions, a characteristic of the ideal cubic closed-packed rocksalt composition. In this work, a new rocksalt-derived structure type is stabilized by selecting divalent Cu and pentavalent Sb cations to favor the formation of oxygen vacancies during synthesis. The structure and composition of the oxygen-deficient Li4CuSbO5.5□0.5 phase is characterized by combining X-ray and neutron diffraction, ICP-OES, XAS, and magnetometry measurements. The ordering of cations and oxygen vacancies is discussed in comparison with the related Li2CuO2□1 and Li5SbO5□1 phases. The electrochemical properties of this material are presented, with only 0.55 Li+ extracted upon oxidation, corresponding to a limited utilization of cationic and/or anionic redox, whereas more than 2 Li+ ions can be reversibly inserted upon reduction to 1 V vs Li+/Li, a large capacity attributed to a conversion reaction and the reduction of Cu2+ to Cu0. Control of the formation of oxygen vacancies in Li-rich rocksalt oxides by selecting appropriate cations and synthesis conditions affords a new route for tuning the electrochemical properties of cathode materials for Li-ion batteries. Furthermore, the development of material models of the required level of detail to predict phase diagrams and electrochemical properties, including oxygen release in Li-rich rocksalt oxides, still relies on the accurate prediction of crystal structures. Experimental identification of new accessible structure types stabilized by oxygen vacancies represents a valuable step forward in the development of predictive models.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 58(22): 15644-15651, 2019 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31697483

ABSTRACT

With increasing hopes placed on the Na-ion battery technology to complement the current Li-ion battery systems, it is important to improve the energy density of Na-based cathode materials. Na-rich rocksalt oxides, Na1+xM1-xO2 (M = transition metal), combining cationic and anionic redox activity, could provide the necessary increase in capacity to achieve this goal, but their synthesis remains challenging compared to the Li analogues. As an alternative, mixed compounds Na(AxM1-x)O2, with A being an electropositive cation such as Li, Mg, or Zn sitting in the transition-metal layer, have been reported. As a continuation, we herein prepared the mixed Na(Li1/3Ir2/3)O2 phase and compared its structure and electrochemical properties with the well-known Li2IrO3 and Na2IrO3 parent materials. By mixing Na and Li in the material, the stacking sequence of the transition-metal honeycomb layers in Na(Li1/3Ir2/3)O2 is modified compared to the two parent materials, resulting in the presence of extra superstructure peaks in X-ray diffraction data. Using electrochemical characterization and an in-situ X-ray diffraction technique, the mixed Na(Li1/3Ir2/3)O2 was found to be unstable both in Li and Na batteries and to separate into Na-rich NaxIrO3 and Li-rich LixIrO3 phases due to the competition between electrochemical (de)insertion, cation exchange with the electrolyte, and segregation of Na and Li in the material. These findings highlight important challenges and offer useful insight into guide the design of new mixed Na(AxM1-x)O2 cathode materials with high capacity for Na-ion batteries.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(18): 7333-7346, 2019 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30974948

ABSTRACT

Multinary lithium oxides with the rock salt structure are of technological importance as cathode materials in rechargeable lithium ion batteries. Current state-of-the-art cathodes such as LiNi1/3Mn1/3Co1/3O2 rely on redox cycling of earth-abundant transition-metal cations to provide charge capacity. Recently, the possibility of using the oxide anion as a redox center in Li-rich rock salt oxides has been established as a new paradigm in the design of cathode materials with enhanced capacities (>200 mAh/g). To increase the lithium content and access electrons from oxygen-derived states, these materials typically require transition metals in high oxidation states, which can be easily achieved using d0 cations. However, Li-rich rock salt oxides with high valent d0 cations such as Nb5+ and Mo6+ show strikingly high voltage hysteresis between charge and discharge, the origin of which is uninvestigated. In this work, we study a series of Li-rich compounds, Li4+ xNi1- xWO6 (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.25) adopting two new and distinct cation-ordered variants of the rock salt structure. The Li4.15Ni0.85WO6 (x = 0.15) phase has a large reversible capacity of 200 mAh/g, without accessing the Ni3+/Ni4+ redox couple, implying that more than two-thirds of the capacity is due to anionic redox, with good cyclability. The presence of the 5d0 W6+ cation affords extensive (>2 V) voltage hysteresis associated with the anionic redox. We present experimental evidence for the formation of strongly stabilized localized O-O single bonds that explain the energy penalty required to reduce the material upon discharge. The high valent d0 cation associates localized anion-anion bonding with the anion redox capacity.

4.
Nat Mater ; 16(5): 580-586, 2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28250444

ABSTRACT

Lithium-ion battery cathode materials have relied on cationic redox reactions until the recent discovery of anionic redox activity in Li-rich layered compounds which enables capacities as high as 300 mAh g-1. In the quest for new high-capacity electrodes with anionic redox, a still unanswered question was remaining regarding the importance of the structural dimensionality. The present manuscript provides an answer. We herein report on a ß-Li2IrO3 phase which, in spite of having the Ir arranged in a tridimensional (3D) framework instead of the typical two-dimensional (2D) layers seen in other Li-rich oxides, can reversibly exchange 2.5 e- per Ir, the highest value ever reported for any insertion reaction involving d-metals. We show that such a large activity results from joint reversible cationic (Mn+) and anionic (O2)n- redox processes, the latter being visualized via complementary transmission electron microscopy and neutron diffraction experiments, and confirmed by density functional theory calculations. Moreover, ß-Li2IrO3 presents a good cycling behaviour while showing neither cationic migration nor shearing of atomic layers as seen in 2D-layered Li-rich materials. Remarkably, the anionic redox process occurs jointly with the oxidation of Ir4+ at potentials as low as 3.4 V versus Li+/Li0, as equivalently observed in the layered α-Li2IrO3 polymorph. Theoretical calculations elucidate the electrochemical similarities and differences of the 3D versus 2D polymorphs in terms of structural, electronic and mechanical descriptors. Our findings free the structural dimensionality constraint and broaden the possibilities in designing high-energy-density electrodes for the next generation of Li-ion batteries.

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