First-Principles and Experimental Investigation of ABO 4 Zircons as Calcium Intercalation Cathodes.
Jiyoon KimDogancan SariQian ChenAnn RuttGerbrand CederKristin A PerssonPublished in: Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Identifying next-generation batteries with multivalent ions, such as Ca 2+ is an active area of research to meet the increasing demand for large-scale, renewable energy storage solutions. Despite the promise of higher energy densities with multivalent batteries, one of their main challenges is addressing the sluggish kinetics in cathodes that arise from stronger electrostatic interactions between the multivalent ion and host lattice. In this paper, zircons are theoretically and experimentally evaluated as Ca cathodes. A migration barrier as low as 113 meV is computationally found in YVO 4 , which is the lowest Ca 2+ barrier reported to date. Low barriers are confirmed across 18 zircon compositions, which are related to the low coordination change and reduced interstitial site preference of Ca 2+ along the diffusion pathway. Among the four materials (BiVO 4 , YVO 4 , EuCrO 4 , and YCrO 4 ) that were synthesized, characterized, and electrochemically cycled, the highest initial capacity of 81 mA h/g and the most reversible capacity of 65 mA h/g were achieved in YVO 4 and BiVO 4 , respectively. Despite the facile migration of multivalent ions in zircons, density functional theory predictions of the unstable, discharged structures at higher Ca 2+ concentrations (Ca x >0.25 ABO 4 ), the low dimensionality of the migration pathway, and the defect analysis of the B site atom can rationalize the limited intercalation observed upon electrochemical cycling.