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Metal-Metal Bonding as an Electrode Design Principle in the Low-Strain Cluster Compound LiScMo 3 O 8 .

Kira E WyckoffJonas L KaufmanSun Woong BaekChristian DolleJoshua J ZakJadon BienzLinus KautzschRebecca C VincentArava ZoharKimberly A SeeYolita M EggelerLaurent PilonAnton Van der VenRam Seshadri
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Electrode materials for Li + -ion batteries require optimization along several disparate axes related to cost, performance, and sustainability. One of the important performance axes is the ability to retain structural integrity though cycles of charge/discharge. Metal-metal bonding is a distinct feature of some refractory metal oxides that has been largely underutilized in electrochemical energy storage, but that could potentially impact structural integrity. Here LiScMo 3 O 8 , a compound containing triangular clusters of metal-metal bonded Mo atoms, is studied as a potential anode material in Li + -ion batteries. Electrons inserted though lithiation are localized across rigid Mo 3 triangles (rather than on individual metal ions), resulting in minimal structural change as suggested by operando diffraction. The unusual chemical bonding allows this compound to be cycled with Mo atoms below a formally +4 valence state, resulting in an acceptable voltage regime that is appropriate for an anode material. Several characterization methods including potentiometric entropy measurements indicate two-phase regions, which are attributed through extensive first-principles modeling to Li + ordering. This study of LiScMo 3 O 8 provides valuable insights for design principles for structural motifs that stably and reversibly permit Li + (de)insertion.
Keyphrases
  • ion batteries
  • machine learning
  • gold nanoparticles
  • mass spectrometry
  • deep learning
  • quantum dots