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Magnesium Mitigation Behavior in P2-Layered Sodium-Ion Battery Cathode.

Hui WanShu LiXiang-Long ZhangLichen WuZhixiao LiuGuangdong LiuCaitian GaoWei-Qing HuangHuiqiu DengWangyu HuFei Gao
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2023)
Heteroatom incorporation can effectively suppress the phase transition of layered sodium-ion battery cathode, but heteroatom behaviors during operating conditions are not completely understood at the atomic scale. Here, density functional theory calculations are combined with experiments to explore the mitigation behavior of Mg dopant and its mechanisms under operating conditions in P2-Na 0.67 Ni 0.33 Mn 0.67 O 2 . The void formed by Na extraction will pump some Mg dopants into Na layers from TM layers, and the collective diffusion of more than one Mg ion most likely occurs when the Mg content is relatively high in the TM layer, finally aggregating to form Mg-enrich regions (i.e., Mg segregation) apart from Ni vacancies. The void-pump-effect -induced Mg segregation effectively suppresses the P2-O2 phase transition owing to the stronger Mg-O electrostatic attraction that enhances the integrate of two adjacent oxygen layers and prevents the crack growth by mitigating the lattice volume variation under high-voltage cycling. Our work provides a fundamental understanding of heteroatom mitigation behavior in layered cathodes at the atomic level for next-generation energy storage technologies.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • transition metal
  • solar cells
  • room temperature
  • stress induced
  • metal organic framework