Intrinsic Kinetic Limitations in Substituted Lithium-Layered Transition-Metal Oxide Electrodes
Author(s) -
Antonin Grenier,
Philip J. Reeves,
Hao Liu,
Ieuan D. Seymour,
Katharina Märker,
Kamila M. Wiaderek,
Peter J. Chupas,
Clare P. Grey,
Karena W. Chapman
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.9b13551
Subject(s) - chemistry , faraday efficiency , kinetic energy , capacity loss , electrochemistry , lithium (medication) , oxide , electrode , analytical chemistry (journal) , phase (matter) , synchrotron , charge ordering , charge (physics) , organic chemistry , medicine , physics , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics , endocrinology
Substituted Li-layered transition-metal oxide (LTMO) electrodes such as Li x Ni y Mn z Co 1- y - z O 2 (NMC) and Li x Ni y Co 1- y - z Al z O 2 (NCA) show reduced first cycle Coulombic efficiency (90-87% under standard cycling conditions) in comparison with the archetypal Li x CoO 2 (LCO; ∼98% efficiency). Focusing on Li x Ni 0.8 Co 0.15 Al 0.05 O 2 as a model compound, we use operando synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to demonstrate that the apparent first-cycle capacity loss is a kinetic effect linked to limited Li mobility a x > 0.88, with near full capacity recovered during a potentiostatic hold following the galvanostatic charge-discharge cycle. This kinetic capacity loss, unlike many capacity losses in LTMOs, is independent of the cutoff voltage during delithiation and it is a reversible process. The kinetic limitation manifests not only as the kinetic capacity loss during discharge but as a subtle bimodal compositional distribution early in charge and, also, a dramatic increase of the charge-discharge voltage hysteresis a x > 0.88. 7 Li NMR measurements indicate that the kinetic limitation reflects limited Li transport a x > 0.86. Electrochemical measurements on a wider range of LTMOs including Li x (Ni,Fe) y Co 1- y O 2 suggest that 5% substitution is sufficient to induce the kinetic limitation and that the effect is not limited to Ni substitution. We outline how, in addition to a reduction in the number of Li vacancies and shrinkage of the Li-layer size, the intrinsic charge storage mechanism (two-phase vs solid-solution) and localization of charge give rise to additional kinetic barriers in NCA and nonmetallic LTMOs in general.
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