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1.
ACS Nano ; 17(6): 5570-5578, 2023 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36895079

ABSTRACT

Effective harvest of electrochemical energy from insulating compounds serves as the key to unlocking the potential capacity from many materials that otherwise could not be exploited for energy storage. Herein, an effective strategy is proposed by employing LiCoO2, a widely commercialized positive electrode material in Li-ion batteries, as an efficient redox mediator to catalyze the decomposition of Na2CO3 via an intercalating mechanism. Differing from traditional redox mediation processes where reactions occur on the limited surface sites of catalysts, the electrochemically delithiated Li1-xCoO2 forms NayLi1-xCoO2 crystals, which act as a cation intercalating catalyzer that directs Na+ insertion-extraction and activates the reaction of Na2CO3 with carbon. Through altering the route of the mass transport process, such redox centers are delocalized throughout the bulk of LiCoO2, which ensures maximum active reaction sites. The decomposition of Na2CO3 thus accelerated significantly reduces the charging overpotential in Na-CO2 batteries; meanwhile, Na compensation can also be achieved for various Na-deficient cathode materials. Such a surface-induced catalyzing mechanism for conversion-type reactions, realized via cation intercalation chemistry, expands the boundary for material discovery and makes those conventionally unfeasible a rich source to explore for efficient utilization of chemical energy.

2.
Adv Mater ; 34(30): e2202745, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35657036

ABSTRACT

The key to breaking through the capacity limitation imposed by intercalation chemistry lies in the ability to harness more active sites that can reversibly accommodate more ions (e.g., Li+ ) and electrons within a finite space. However, excessive Li-ion insertion into the Li layer of layered cathodes results in fast performance decay due to the huge lattice change and irreversible phase transformation. In this study, an ultrahigh reversible capacity is demonstrated by a layered oxide cathode purely based on manganese. Through a wealth of characterizations, it is clarified that the presence of low-content Li2 MnO3 domains not only reduces the amount of irreversible O loss; but also regulates Mn migration in LiMnO2 domains, enabling elastic lattice with high reversibility for tetrahedral sites Li-ion storage in Li layers. This work utilizes bulk cation disorder to create stable Li-ion-storage tetrahedral sites and an elastic lattice for layered materials, with a reversible capacity of 600 mA h g-1 , demonstrated in th range 0.6-4.9 V versus Li/Li+ at 10 mA g-1 . Admittedly, discharging to 0.6 V might be too low for practical use, but this exploration is still of great importance as it conceptually demonstrates the limit of Li-ions insertion into layered oxide materials.

3.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 4903, 2021 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34385435

ABSTRACT

Layered transition metal oxides are the most important cathode materials for Li/Na/K ion batteries. Suppressing undesirable phase transformations during charge-discharge processes is a critical and fundamental challenge towards the rational design of high-performance layered oxide cathodes. Here we report a shale-like NaxMnO2 (S-NMO) electrode that is derived from a simple but effective water-mediated strategy. This strategy expands the Na+ layer spacings of P2-type Na0.67MnO2 and transforms the particles into accordion-like morphology. Therefore, the S-NMO electrode exhibits improved Na+ mobility and near-zero-strain property during charge-discharge processes, which leads to outstanding rate capability (100 mAh g-1 at the operation time of 6 min) and cycling stability (>3000 cycles). In addition, the water-mediated strategy is feasible to other layered sodium oxides and the obtained S-NMO electrode has an excellent tolerance to humidity. This work demonstrates that engineering the spacings of alkali-metal layer is an effective strategy to stabilize the structure of layered transition metal oxides.

4.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 3544, 2020 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32669558

ABSTRACT

Air-stability is one of the most important considerations for the practical application of electrode materials in energy-harvesting/storage devices, ranging from solar cells to rechargeable batteries. The promising P2-layered sodium transition metal oxides (P2-NaxTmO2) often suffer from structural/chemical transformations when contacted with moist air. However, these elaborate transitions and the evaluation rules towards air-stable P2-NaxTmO2 have not yet been clearly elucidated. Herein, taking P2-Na0.67MnO2 and P2-Na0.67Ni0.33Mn0.67O2 as key examples, we unveil the comprehensive structural/chemical degradation mechanisms of P2-NaxTmO2 in different ambient atmospheres by using various microscopic/spectroscopic characterizations and first-principle calculations. The extent of bulk structural/chemical transformation of P2-NaxTmO2 is determined by the amount of extracted Na+, which is mainly compensated by Na+/H+ exchange. By expanding our study to a series of Mn-based oxides, we reveal that the air-stability of P2-NaxTmO2 is highly related to their oxidation features in the first charge process and further propose a practical evaluating rule associated with redox couples for air-stable NaxTmO2 cathodes.

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