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Onset Potential for Electrolyte Oxidation and Ni-Rich Cathode Degradation in Lithium-Ion Batteries

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Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Li, Weiqun 
Temprano, Israel 
O'Keefe, Christopher A 

Abstract

High-capacity Ni-rich layered metal oxide cathodes are highly desirable to increase the energy density of lithium-ion batteries. However, these materials suffer from poor cycling performance, which is exacerbated by increased cell voltage. We demonstrate here the detrimental effect of ethylene carbonate (EC), a core component in conventional electrolytes, when NMC811 (LiNi0.8Mn0.1Co0.1O2) is charged above 4.4 V vs. Li/Li+ – the onset potential for lattice oxygen release. Oxygen loss is enhanced by EC-containing electrolytes – compared to EC-free – and correlates with more electrolyte oxidation/breakdown and cathode surface degradation, which increase concurrently above 4.4 V. In contrast, NMC111 (LiNi0.33Mn0.33Co0.33O2), which does not release oxygen up to 4.6 V, shows similar extents of degradation irrespective of the electrolyte. This work highlights the incompatibility between conventional EC-based electrolytes and Ni-rich cathodes (more generally, cathodes that release lattice oxygen such as Li-/Mn-rich and disordered rocksalt cathodes), and motivates further work on wider classes of electrolytes and additives.

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Keywords

Journal Title

ACS ENERGY LETTERS

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2380-8195
2380-8195

Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)
Sponsorship
Faraday Institution (Unknown)
Faraday Institution (FIRG024)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/P024947/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/R00661X/1)
The present research has been supported by the Faraday Institution degradation project (FIRG001) and EPSRC (EP/S003053/1). W. M. D., M. F. L. D., and C. P. G. acknowledge funding from Cambridge Royce facilities grant EP/P024947/1 and Sir Henry Royce Institute grant EP/R00661X/1. The authors are grateful to A. Jansen, S.E. Trask, B.J. Polzin, and A.R. Dunlop at the U.S. Department of Energy’s CAMP (Cell Analysis, Modeling, and Prototyping) Facility, Argonne National Laboratory, for producing and supplying the electrodes in this work. We thank Nigel Howard for assistance with the ICP-OES measurements, and Bernardine Rinkel and Jennifer Allen for useful discussions.
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