Noninvasive rejuvenation strategy of nickel-rich layered positive electrode for Li-ion battery through magneto-electrochemical synergistic activation
Nickel-rich layered oxides are one of the most promising positive electrode active materials for high-energy Li-ion batteries. Unfortunately, the practical performance is inevitably circumscribed by the structural deterioration deriving from the Ni/Li antisite disorder, leading to severe capacity lo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2024-11, Vol.15 (1), p.10243-11, Article 10243 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Nickel-rich layered oxides are one of the most promising positive electrode active materials for high-energy Li-ion batteries. Unfortunately, the practical performance is inevitably circumscribed by the structural deterioration deriving from the Ni/Li antisite disorder, leading to severe capacity loss and life attenuation. Herein, we propose an economical and facile rejuvenation strategy by employing the magneto-electrochemical synergistic activation targeting the positive electrode in assembled Li-ion batteries. This approach induces a transition of Ni
3
+
from high-spin to low-spin, reducing the super-exchange interaction of Ni-O-transition metal (TM). Meanwhile, electrochemical reaction drives Li
+
from the host material and promotes Ni
3
+
to reoccupy TM layer, recovering intrinsic Li site and extending cycle life. The strategy demonstrates that low-quality positive electrodes can be converted to high-quality ones. Notably, the method can revitalize an aged Li-ion pouch cell (SiC||NCM811, 8 Ah nominal capacity) via optimizing cation occupancy and increase its capacity by 10% from 6.49 to 7.14 Ah at 1 C, illustrating the benefits of the upcycling process.
Severe Ni/Li antisite disorder in nickel-rich layered oxides leads to structural degradation and performance decay in Li-ion batteries. Here, authors report a noninvasive strategy of magnetoelectrochemical synergistic activation to realize ordered cation rearrangement and recovery battery capacity. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-024-54641-z |