Demystifying charge-compensation mechanisms and oxygen dimerization in Li-rich Li 2 NiO 3 cathodes
Published version
Peer-reviewed
Repository URI
Repository DOI
Type
Change log
Abstract
Li-rich cathodes are gaining popularity for Li-ion batteries due to their higher capacity compared to standard layered cathodes. Here we elucidate the complex redox and O dimerization mechanisms using advanced materials theory. Li-rich cathodes are gaining popularity for Li-ion batteries due to their higher capacity compared to standard layered cathodes. However, the redox mechanisms in these materials are still not clear, nor is the origin of the extra capacity observed experimentally. We investigate the elusive charge-compensation mechanisms and their impact on potential oxygen-dimer formation in a recently synthesized Li-rich cathode, Li 2 NiO 3 . Using state-of-the-art ab initio dynamical mean-field theory, we show that the excess capacity in Li 2 NiO 3 comes from a combined Ni and O redox, unlike its layered counterpart LiNiO 2 , where O redox predominates. Moreover, we demonstrate O dimer formation via a plot of the electron localization function for the first time, and attribute this formation to the higher oxidation state of O, even in the pristine material. Finally, we show that Li migration to the interlayer tetrahedral sites at the end of charge is potentially unlikely due to the end configuration being higher in energy and the stabilization of the parent structure caused by O dimerization. Without this microscopic understanding, it is not possible to design better Li-rich high Ni-content cathodes with higher capacity and minimal degradation.
Description
Acknowledgements: HB acknowledges fruitful discussions with Prof. Antoine Georges and Prof. Jean-Marie Tarascon. HB, CPG, and AJM acknowledge critical inputs from Prof. Louis F. J. Piper and Prof. David O. Scanlon. Generous computing resources were provided by the Sulis HPC service (EP/T022108/1), ARCHER2 UK National Computing Service which was granted via HPC-CONEXS, the UK High-End Computing Consortium (EPSRC grant no. EP/X035514/1) and networking support by CCP-NC (EP/T026642/1), CCP9 (EP/T026375/1), and UKCP (EP/P022561/1). This work has been funded by the Faraday Institution degradation project (FIRG060).
Publication status: Published
Journal Title
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
2050-7496

