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Development of High-Throughput Methods for Sodium-Ion Battery Cathodes

44

Citations

22

References

2020

Year

Abstract

Combinatorial synthesis of Li-ion batteries has proven extremely powerful in screening complex compositional spaces for next-generation materials. To date, no Na-ion counterpart exists wherein Na-ion cathodes can be synthesized in such a way to be comparable to that obtained in bulk synthesis. Herein, we develop a synthesis route wherein hundreds of milligram-scale powder samples can be made in a total time of 3 days. We focus on materials in the Na-Fe-Mn-O pseudoternary system of high immediate interest. Using a sol-gel method, developed herein, yields both phase-pure combinatorial samples of Na<sub>2/3</sub>Fe<sub>1/2</sub>Mn<sub>1/2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> and NaFe<sub>1/2</sub>Mn<sub>1/2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>, consistent with previous reports on bulk samples of interest commercially. By contrast, the synthesis route used for Li-ion cathodes (namely coprecipitations) does not yield phase pure materials, suggesting that the sol-gel method is more effective in mixing the Na, Fe, and Mn than coprecipitation. This has important consequences for all attempts to make these materials, even in bulk. Finally, we demonstrate that these milligram-scale powder samples can be tested electrochemically in a combinatorial cell. The resulting cyclic voltammograms are in excellent agreement with those found on bulk samples in the literature. This demonstrates that the methodology developed here will be effective in characterizing the hundreds of samples needed to understand the complex ternary systems of interest and that such results will scale-up well to the gram and kilogram scale.

References

YearCitations

2017

542

2013

341

2018

225

2005

148

2016

139

2013

119

2001

100

2003

93

2014

76

2008

74

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