| Literature DB >> 30967531 |
Ruoqian Lin1, Enyuan Hu2, Mingjie Liu1, Yi Wang3, Hao Cheng4, Jinpeng Wu5, Jin-Cheng Zheng4,6, Qin Wu1, Seongmin Bak2, Xiao Tong1, Rui Zhang7, Wanli Yang5, Kristin A Persson8,9, Xiqian Yu10, Xiao-Qing Yang11, Huolin L Xin12,13.
Abstract
Despite the importance of studying the instability of delithiated cathode materials, it remains difficult to underpin the degradation mechanism of lithium-rich cathode materials due to the complication of combined chemical and structural evolutions. Herein, we use state-of-the-art electron microscopy tools, in conjunction with synchrotron X-ray techniques and first-principle calculations to study a 4d-element-containing compound, Li2Ru0.5Mn0.5O3. We find surprisingly, after cycling, ruthenium segregates out as metallic nanoclusters on the reconstructed surface. Our calculations show that the unexpected ruthenium metal segregation is due to its thermodynamic insolubility in the oxygen deprived surface. This insolubility can disrupt the reconstructed surface, which explains the formation of a porous structure in this material. This work reveals the importance of studying the thermodynamic stability of the reconstructed film on the cathode materials and offers a theoretical guidance for choosing manganese substituting elements in lithium-rich as well as stoichiometric layer-layer compounds for stabilizing the cathode surface.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30967531 PMCID: PMC6456622 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-09248-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Electrochemical, X-ray pair distribution function and absorption analysis of Li2Ru0.5Mn0.5O3 (LRMO). a Charge/discharge curves of LRMO/lithium half-cell with cutoff voltages of 2 V and 4.7 V. b Charge/discharge capacity and coulombic efficiency of LRMO half-cell as a function of charge cycle. c Synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction measurement of pristine LRMO (inset: atomic model of LRMO). d X-ray pair distribution function of pristine LRMO, LRMO after 20 cycles, and Li2RuO3 as reference samples. e Hard X-ray absorption spectra of the pristine LRMO and LRMO after 15 cycles for the Ru K edge. f Soft X-ray absorption spectra of the pristine LRMO and LRMO after 15 cycles for the Mn L3 edge
Fig. 2Three-dimensional visualization of the chemical and structural change of Li2Ru0.5Mn0.5O3 (LRMO) before and after extended charge/discharge cycling. Three-dimensional distribution of Ru and Mn of a pristine LRMO and b LRMO after 97 charge/discharge cycles reconstructed by STEM-EDX tomography. c annular dark-field STEM tomographic (ADF-STEM) reconstruction of a LRMO primary particle after 97 cycles. Two cross-sectional images of the three-dimensional reconstruction are presented to demonstrate that a porous structure had developed throughout the particle (also see Supplementary Figs. 2 and 16 and Supplementary Movie 2). (Scale bar: 100 nm)
Fig. 3Atomic-scale imaging of the near-surface structure of primary particles. Aberration-corrected high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy (Z-contrast STEM) image of a pristine LRMO and b LRMO after 15 cycles. a Atomic-resolution Z-contrast images show dark lithium diffusion channels extend from the interior of the particle to the surface indicating that the structure at the surface is nearly the same as the bulk. b Images show the near-surface area of LRMO was significantly disrupted after 15 charge/discharge cycles. High-intensity clusters are observed over the entire surface. Insets of b (i) show atomic-resolution images of the segregated clusters agree with the projected structure of metallic ruthenium (atomic structure overlaid in red). (Scale bar in a (i) 100 nm; scale bar in the rest: 2 nm)
Fig. 4Revealing the surface chemistry by electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS). a STEM-EELS mapping of the Mn, Ru, and O in the near-surface area of a LRMO particle after 15 charge cycles. The Ru and O maps show that cluster on the right is nearly pure Ru without oxygen. b The EELS spectra integrated from area 1, 2, and 3 in a. c The Ru 3p1/2 core-level XPS spectra of the LRMO cathode surface as a function of charge/discharge cycles. The Ru4+ composition decreases and the Ru0 composition increases as the cathode undergoes more cycles. (Scale bar: 1 nm)
Fig. 5Ab initio calculation for ruthenium segregation and prediction for Mn/Co/Ni substitution that can stabilize the surface. a Ternary phase diagram showing the complete convex hull for the system. b Presentation of stable phases as a function of oxygen chemical potential phases along the bisecting line of the phase diagram. c Ab initio DFT calculation of the formation energy of metal-oxygen (MO) rock-salt structure. d Ab initio DFT calculation of the solubility of 3d/4d transition metals in MnO, NiO, and CoO. (See Supplementary Figure 9 for the full solubility calculation)