| Literature DB >> 35676429 |
Tongchao Liu1, Jiajie Liu2, Luxi Li3, Lei Yu4, Jiecheng Diao5, Tao Zhou4, Shunning Li2, Alvin Dai1, Wenguang Zhao2, Shenyang Xu2, Yang Ren3,6, Liguang Wang3, Tianpin Wu3, Rui Qi2, Yinguo Xiao2, Jiaxin Zheng2, Wonsuk Cha3, Ross Harder3, Ian Robinson5,7, Jianguo Wen4, Jun Lu8, Feng Pan9, Khalil Amine10,11,12.
Abstract
Li- and Mn-rich (LMR) cathode materials that utilize both cation and anion redox can yield substantial increases in battery energy density1-3. However, although voltage decay issues cause continuous energy loss and impede commercialization, the prerequisite driving force for this phenomenon remains a mystery3-6 Here, with in situ nanoscale sensitive coherent X-ray diffraction imaging techniques, we reveal that nanostrain and lattice displacement accumulate continuously during operation of the cell. Evidence shows that this effect is the driving force for both structure degradation and oxygen loss, which trigger the well-known rapid voltage decay in LMR cathodes. By carrying out micro- to macro-length characterizations that span atomic structure, the primary particle, multiparticle and electrode levels, we demonstrate that the heterogeneous nature of LMR cathodes inevitably causes pernicious phase displacement/strain, which cannot be eliminated by conventional doping or coating methods. We therefore propose mesostructural design as a strategy to mitigate lattice displacement and inhomogeneous electrochemical/structural evolutions, thereby achieving stable voltage and capacity profiles. These findings highlight the significance of lattice strain/displacement in causing voltage decay and will inspire a wave of efforts to unlock the potential of the broad-scale commercialization of LMR cathode materials.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35676429 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04689-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962