Publication | Open Access
Stabilizing Reversible Oxygen Redox Chemistry in Layered Oxides for Sodium‐Ion Batteries
131
Citations
55
References
2020
Year
EngineeringSodium‐ion BatteriesChemistryTransition Metal LayerAqueous BatterySodium BatteryMaterials ScienceBattery Electrode MaterialsOperando RamanAdvanced Electrode MaterialEnergy StorageSolid-state BatteryRu 0.78ElectrochemistryLi-ion Battery MaterialsCathode MaterialsLayered OxidesElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteries
Abstract Triggering oxygen‐related activity is demonstrated as a promising strategy to effectively boost energy density of layered cathodes for sodium‐ion batteries. However, irreversible lattice oxygen loss will induce detrimental structure distortion, resulting in voltage decay and cycle degradation. Herein, a layered structure P2‐type Na 0.66 Li 0.22 Ru 0.78 O 2 cathode is designed, delivering reversible oxygen‐related and Ru‐based redox chemistry simultaneously. Benefiting from the combination of strong Ru 4d‐O 2p covalency and stable Li location within the transition metal layer, reversible anionic/cationic redox chemistry is achieved successfully, which is proved by systematic bulk/surface analysis by in/ex situ spectroscopy (operando Raman and hard X‐ray absorption spectroscopy, etc.). Moreover, the robust structure and reversible phase transition evolution revealed by operando X‐ray diffraction further establish a high degree reversible (de)intercalation processes (≈150 mAh g −1 , reversible capacity) and long‐term cycling (average capacity drop of 0.018%, 500 cycles).
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