Login / Signup

Correlating ligand-to-metal charge transfer with voltage hysteresis in a Li-rich rock-salt compound exhibiting anionic redox.

Biao LiMoulay Tahar SougratiGwenaëlle RousseAnatolii V MorozovRémi DedryvèreAntonella IadecolaAnatoliy SenyshynLeiting ZhangArtem M AbakumovMarie-Liesse DoubletJean Marie Tarascon
Published in: Nature chemistry (2021)
Anionic redox is a double-edged sword for Li-ion cathodes because it offers a transformational increase in energy density that is also negated by several detrimental drawbacks to its practical implementation. Among them, voltage hysteresis is the most troublesome because its origin is still unclear and under debate. Herein, we tackle this issue by designing a prototypical Li-rich cation-disordered rock-salt compound Li1.17Ti0.33Fe0.5O2 that shows anionic redox activity and exceptionally large voltage hysteresis while exhibiting a partially reversible Fe migration between octahedral and tetrahedral sites. Through combined in situ and ex situ spectroscopic techniques, we demonstrate the existence of a non-equilibrium (adiabatic) redox pathway enlisting Fe3+/Fe4+ and O redox as opposed to the equilibrium (non-adiabatic) redox pathway involving sole O redox. We further show that the charge transfer from O(2p) lone pair states to Fe(3d) states involving sluggish structural distortion is responsible for voltage hysteresis. This study provides a general understanding of various voltage hysteresis signatures in the large family of Li-rich rock-salt compounds.
Keyphrases
  • ion batteries
  • electron transfer
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • aqueous solution
  • molecular dynamics
  • gene expression
  • ionic liquid
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • visible light