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Heavy Fluorination via Ion Exchange Achieves High-Performance Li-Mn-O-F Layered Cathode for Li-Ion Batteries.

Junliang LuBo CaoBingwen HuYuxin LiaoRui QiJiajie LiuChangjian ZuoShenyang XuZhibo LiCong ChenMing-Jian ZhangFeng Pan
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2021)
Lithium-excess manganese layered oxide Li2 MnO3 , attracts much attention as a cathode in Li-ion batteries, due to the low cost and the ultrahigh theoretical capacity (≈460 mA h g-1 ). However, it delivers a low reversible practical capacity (<200 mA h g-1 ) due to the irreversible oxygen redox at high potentials (>4.5 V). Herein, heavy fluorination (9.5%) is successfully implemented in the layered anionic framework of a Li-Mn-O-F (LMOF) cathode through a unique ion-exchange route. F substitution with O stabilizes the layered anionic framework, completely inhibits the O2 evolution during the first cycle, and greatly enhances the reversibility of oxygen redox, delivering an ultrahigh reversible capacity of 389 mA h g-1 , which is 85% of the theoretical capacity of Li2 MnO3 . Moreover, it also induces a thin spinel shell coherently forming on the particle surface, which greatly improves the surface structure stability, making LMOF exhibit a superior cycling stability (a capacity retention of 91.8% after 120 cycles at 50 mA g-1 ) and excellent rate capability. These findings stress the importance of stabilizing the anionic framework in developing high-performance low-cost cathodes for next-generation Li-ion batteries.
Keyphrases
  • ion batteries
  • low cost
  • high intensity
  • transition metal
  • ionic liquid
  • metal organic framework