Unexpectedly Large Contribution of Oxygen to Charge Compensation Triggered by Structural Disordering: Detailed Experimental and Theoretical Study on a Li 3 NbO 4 -NiO Binary System.
Ryutaro FukumaMaho HaradaWenwen ZhaoMiho SawamuraYusuke NodaMasanobu NakayamaMasato GotoDaisuke KanYuichi ShimakawaMasao YonemuraNaohiro IkedaRyuta WatanukiHenrik L AndersenAnita M D'AngeloNeeraj SharmaJiwon ParkHye Ryung ByonSayuri FukuyamaZhenji HanHitoshi FukumitsuMartin Schulz-DobrickKeisuke YamanakaHirona YamagishiToshiaki OhtaNaoaki YabuuchiPublished in: ACS central science (2022)
Dependence on lithium-ion batteries for automobile applications is rapidly increasing. The emerging use of anionic redox can boost the energy density of batteries, but the fundamental origin of anionic redox is still under debate. Moreover, to realize anionic redox, many reported electrode materials rely on manganese ions through π-type interactions with oxygen. Here, through a systematic experimental and theoretical study on a binary system of Li 3 NbO 4 -NiO, we demonstrate for the first time the unexpectedly large contribution of oxygen to charge compensation for electrochemical oxidation in Ni-based materials. In general, for Ni-based materials, e.g ., LiNiO 2 , charge compensation is achieved mainly by Ni oxidation, with a lower contribution from oxygen. In contrast, for Li 3 NbO 4 -NiO, oxygen-based charge compensation is triggered by structural disordering and σ-type interactions with nickel ions, which are associated with a unique environment for oxygen, i.e ., a linear Ni-O-Ni configuration in the disordered system. Reversible anionic redox with a small hysteretic behavior was achieved for LiNi 2/3 Nb 1/3 O 2 with a cation-disordered Li/Ni arrangement. Further Li enrichment in the structure destabilizes anionic redox and leads to irreversible oxygen loss due to the disappearance of the linear Ni-O-Ni configuration and the formation of unstable Ni ions with high oxidation states. On the basis of these results, we discuss the possibility of using σ-type interactions for anionic redox to design advanced electrode materials for high-energy lithium-ion batteries.