| Literature DB >> 30063329 |
Chun-Liu Xu1, Wei Xiang2,3, Zhen-Guo Wu1, Ya-Di Xu1, Yong-Chun Li1, Ming-Zhe Chen4, Guo XiaoDong1, Gen-Pin Lv3, Jun Zhang3, Ben-He Zhong1.
Abstract
Nickel-rich layered oxides are regarded as very promising materials as cathodes for lithium-ion batteries because of their environmental benignancy, low cost, and high energy density. However, insufficient cycle performance and poor thermotic characteristics induced by structural degradation at high potentials and elevated temperatures pose challenging hurdles for nickel-rich cathodes. Here, a protective pillaring layer, in which partial Ni2+ ions occupy Li slabs induced by gradient Mn4+, is integrated into the primary particle of LiNi0.815Co0.15Al0.035O2 to stabilize the surface/interfacial structure. With the stable outer surface provided by the enriched Mn4+ gradient concentration and the pillar effect of the NiO-like phase, Mn-incorporated quaternary cathodes show enhanced structural stability and improved Li+ diffusion as well as lithium-storage properties. Compared with the severe capacity fade of a pure layered structure, the cathode with gradient Mn4+ exhibits more stable cycling behavior with a capacity retention of 80.0% after 500 cycles at 5.0 C.Entities:
Keywords: Lithium-ion batteries; NCA; NiO-like phase; gradient concentration; pillar effect; structure stability; surface modification
Year: 2018 PMID: 30063329 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b10372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229