Role of Substitution Elements in Enhancing the Structural Stability of Li-Rich Layered Cathodes

Element doping/substitution has been recognized as an effective strategy to enhance the structural stability of layered cathodes. However, abundant substitution studies not only lack a clear identification of the substitution sites in the material lattice, but the rigid interpretation of the transit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2023-04, Vol.145 (15), p.8700-8713
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Baodan, Zhang, Yiming, Wang, Xiaotong, Liu, Hui, Yan, Yawen, Zhou, Shiyuan, Tang, Yonglin, Zeng, Guifan, Wu, Xiaohong, Liao, Hong-Gang, Qiu, Yongfu, Huang, Huan, Zheng, Lirong, Xu, Juping, Yin, Wen, Huang, Zhongyuan, Xiao, Yinguo, Xie, Qingshui, Peng, Dong-Liang, Li, Chao, Qiao, Yu, Sun, Shi-Gang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Element doping/substitution has been recognized as an effective strategy to enhance the structural stability of layered cathodes. However, abundant substitution studies not only lack a clear identification of the substitution sites in the material lattice, but the rigid interpretation of the transition metal (TM)–O covalent theory is also not sufficiently convincing, resulting in the doping/substitution proposals being dragged into design blindness. In this work, taking Li1.2Ni0.2Mn0.6O2 as a prototype, the intense correlation between the “disordered degree” (Li/Ni mixing) and interface-structure stability (e.g., TM–O environment, slab/lattice, and Li+ reversibility) is revealed. Specifically, the degree of disorder induced by the Mg/Ti substitution extends in the opposite direction, conducive to sharp differences in the stability of TM–O, Li+ diffusion, and anion redox reversibility, delivering fairly distinct electrochemical performance. Based on the established paradigm of systematic characterization/analysis, the “degree of disorder” has been shown to be a powerful indicator of material modification by element substitution/doping.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.3c01999