| Literature DB >> 35182015 |
Wengao Zhao1, Lianfeng Zou2, Leiting Zhang3, Xinming Fan4,5, Hehe Zhang6, Francesco Pagani1, Enzo Brack1, Lukas Seidl1, Xing Ou4, Konstantin Egorov1, Xueyi Guo4, Guorong Hu4, Sigita Trabesinger3, Chongmin Wang2, Corsin Battaglia1.
Abstract
Lithium-ion batteries based on single-crystal LiNi1- x - y Cox Mny O2 (NCM, 1-x-y ≥ 0.6) cathode materials are gaining increasing attention due to their improved structural stability resulting in superior cycle life compared to batteries based on polycrystalline NCM. However, an in-depth understanding of the less pronounced degradation mechanism of single-crystal NCM is still lacking. Here, a detailed postmortem study is presented, comparing pouch cells with single-crystal versus polycrystalline LiNi0.60 Co0.20 Mn0.20 O2 (NCM622) cathodes after 1375 dis-/charge cycles against graphite anodes. The thickness of the cation-disordered layer forming in the near-surface region of the cathode particles does not differ significantly between single-crystal and polycrystalline particles, while cracking is pronounced for polycrystalline particles, but practically absent for single-crystal particles. Transition metal dissolution as quantified by time-of-flight mass spectrometry on the surface of the cycled graphite anode is much reduced for single-crystal NCM622. Similarly, CO2 gas evolution during the first two cycles as quantified by electrochemical mass spectrometry is much reduced for single-crystal NCM622. Benefitting from these advantages, graphite/single-crystal NMC622 pouch cells are demonstrated with a cathode areal capacity of 6 mAh cm-2 with an excellent capacity retention of 83% after 3000 cycles to 4.2 V, emphasizing the potential of single-crystalline NCM622 as cathode material for next-generation lithium-ion batteries.Entities:
Keywords: cracking; excellent capacity retention; gas evolution; single-crystal NCM; transition metal dissolution
Year: 2022 PMID: 35182015 DOI: 10.1002/smll.202107357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281