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Accommodating High Transformation Strains in Battery Electrodes via the Formation of Nanoscale Intermediate Phases: Operando Investigation of Olivine NaFePO4
Author(s) -
Kai Xiang,
Wenting Xing,
Dorthe Bomholdt Ravnsbæk,
Liang Hong,
Ming Tang,
Zheng Li,
Kamila M. Wiaderek,
Olaf J. Borkiewicz,
Karena W. Chapman,
Peter J. Chupas,
YetMing Chiang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b04971
Subject(s) - materials science , amorphous solid , chemical physics , powder diffraction , crystallography , cathode , diffraction , phase (matter) , olivine , intercalation (chemistry) , ion , chemistry , mineralogy , inorganic chemistry , optics , physics , organic chemistry
Virtually all intercalation compounds exhibit significant changes in unit cell volume as the working ion concentration varies. Na x FePO 4 (0 < x < 1, NFP) olivine, of interest as a cathode for sodium-ion batteries, is a model for topotactic, high-strain systems as it exhibits one of the largest discontinuous volume changes (∼17% by volume) during its first-order transition between two otherwise isostructural phases. Using synchrotron radiation powder X-ray diffraction (PXD) and pair distribution function (PDF) analysis, we discover a new strain-accommodation mechanism wherein a third, amorphous phase forms to buffer the large lattice mismatch between primary phases. The amorphous phase has short-range order over ∼1nm domains that is characterized by a and b parameters matching one crystalline end-member phase and a c parameter matching the other, but is not detectable by powder diffraction alone. We suggest that this strain-accommodation mechanism may generally apply to systems with large transformation strains.

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