Publication | Closed Access
Origin of High Capacity and Poor Cycling Stability of Li-Rich Layered Oxides: A Long-Duration in Situ Synchrotron Powder Diffraction Study
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Citations
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References
2018
Year
EngineeringHigh-energy Li1.17ni0.19co0.10mn0.54o2ChemistryPoor Cycling StabilityHigh CapacityFading MechanismFading PhenomenonMaterials ScienceMaterials EngineeringBattery Electrode MaterialsOxide ElectronicsAdvanced Electrode MaterialLithium-ion BatteryEnergy StorageFunctional MaterialsSolid-state BatteryLayered MaterialMaterial AnalysisLi-ion Battery MaterialsApplied PhysicsBatteriesLi-rich Layered Oxides
High-energy Li1.17Ni0.19Co0.10Mn0.54O2 (HE-NCM) is a lithium-rich layered oxide with alternating Li- and transition-metal (TM) layers in which excess lithium ions replace transition metals in the host structure. HE-NCM offers a capacity roughly 50 mAh g–1 higher compared to that of conventional layered oxides but suffers from capacity loss and voltage fade upon cycling. Differential capacity plots (taken over 100 cycles) show that the origin of the fading phenomenon is a bulk issue rather than a surface degradation. Although previous studies indicate only minor changes in the bulk material, long duration in situ synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction measurements, in combination with difference Fourier analysis of the data, revealed an irreversible transition-metal motion within the host structure. The extensive work provides new insights into the fading mechanism of the material.
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