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Oxygen Anion Redox Chemistry Correlated with Spin State in Ni-Rich Layered Cathodes.

Zhihua LuJicheng ZhangQinghua ZhangDeniz WongWen YinNian ZhangZhongjun ChenLin GuZhongbo HuXiangfeng Liu
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2023)
Despite the low cost and high capacity of Ni-rich layered oxides (NRLOs), their widespread implementation in electric vehicles is hindered by capacity decay and O release. These issues originate from chemo-mechanical heterogeneity, which is mainly related to oxygen anion redox (OAR). However, what to tune regarding OAR in NRLOs and how to tune it remains unknown. In this study, a close correlation between the OAR chemistry and Li/Ni antisite defects is revealed. Experiments and calculations show the opposite effects of aggregative and dispersive Li/Ni antisite defects on the NiO 6 configuration and Ni spin state in NRLOs. The resulting broad or narrow spans for the energy bands caused by spin states lead to different OAR chemistries. By tuning the Li/Ni antisite defects to be dispersive rather than aggregative, the threshold voltage for triggering OAR is obviously elevated, and the generation of bulk-O 2 -like species and O 2 release at phase transition nodes is fundamentally restrained. The OAR is regulated from irreversible to reversible, fundamentally addressing structural degradation and heterogeneity. This study reveals the interaction of the Li/Ni antisite defect/OAR chemistry/chemo-mechanical heterogeneity and presents some insights into the design of high-performance NRLO cathodes.
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