Publication | Closed Access
A New Spinel‐Layered Li‐Rich Microsphere as a High‐Rate Cathode Material for Li‐Ion Batteries
188
Citations
42
References
2014
Year
EngineeringChemistryLi‐rich Li‐mn‐co‐o MicrospheresChemical EngineeringMaterials ScienceLi‐ion BatteriesTransition Metal MnBattery Electrode MaterialsAdvanced Electrode MaterialLithium-ion BatteryLithium-ion BatteriesBattery AdditivesEnergy StorageHigh‐rate Cathode MaterialSolid-state BatteryElectrochemistryLi-ion Battery MaterialsCathode MaterialsElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteriesAnode MaterialsLi‐mn‐co‐o Microspheres
Li‐rich layered materials are considered to be the promising low‐cost cathodes for lithium‐ion batteries but they suffer from poor rate capability despite of efforts toward surface coating or foreign dopings. Here, spinel‐layered Li‐rich Li‐Mn‐Co‐O microspheres are reported as a new high‐rate cathode material for Li‐ion batteries. The synthetic procedure is relatively simple, involving the formation of uniform carbonate precursor under solvothermal conditions and its subsequent transformation to an assembled microsphere that integrates a spinel‐like component with a layered component by a heat treatment. When calcined at 700 °C, the amount of transition metal Mn and Co in the Li‐Mn‐Co‐O microspheres maintained is similar to at 800 °C, while the structures of constituent particles partially transform from 2D to 3D channels. As a consequence, when tested as a cathode for lithium‐ion batteries, the spinel‐layered Li‐rich Li‐Mn‐Co‐O microspheres obtained at 700 °C show a maximum discharge capacity of 185.1 mA h g −1 at a very high current density of 1200 mA g −1 between 2.0 and 4.6 V. Such a capacity is among the highest reported to date at high charge‐discharge rates. Therefore, the present spinel‐layered Li‐rich Li‐Mn‐Co‐O microspheres represent an attractive alternative to high‐rate electrode materials for lithium‐ion batteries.
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