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Homeostatic Solid Solution in Layered Transition-Metal Oxide Cathodes of Sodium-Ion Batteries.

Meng RenShuo ZhaoSuning GaoTong ZhangMachuan HouWei ZhangKun FengJun ZhongWei-Bo HuaSylvio IndrisKai ZhangJun ChenFujun Li
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Two-phase transformation reaction is ubiquitous in solid-state electrochemistry; however, it usually involves inferior structure rearrangement upon extraction and insertion of large-sized Na + , thus leading to severe local strain, cracks, and capacity decay in sodium-ion batteries (SIBs). Here, a homeostatic solid solution reaction is reported in the layered cathode material P'2-Na 0.653 Ni 0.081 Mn 0.799 Ti 0.120 O 2 during sodiation and desodiation. It is induced by the synergistic incorporation of Ni and Ti for the reinforced O(2p)-Mn(3d-e g *) hybridization, which leads to mitigated Jahn-Teller distortion of MnO 6 octahedra, contracted transition-metal oxide slabs, and enlarged Na layer spacings. The thermodynamically favorable solid solution pathway rewards the SIBs with excellent cycling stability (87.2% capacity retention after 500 cycles) and rate performance (100.5 mA h g -1 at 2500 mA g -1 ). The demonstrated reaction pathway will open a new avenue for rational designing of cathode materials for SIBs and beyond.
Keyphrases
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  • solid state
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