TY - JOUR AU - Daniil A Kitchaev AU - Zhengyan Lun AU - William D Richards AU - Huiwen Ji AU - Raphaële J Clément AU - Mahalingam Balasubramanian AU - Deok-Hwang Kwon AU - Kehua Dai AU - Joseph K Papp AU - Teng Lei AU - Bryan D McCloskey AU - Wanli Yang AU - Jinhyuk Lee AU - Gerbrand Ceder AB -

The discovery of facile Li transport in disordered, Li-excess rocksalt materials has opened a vast new chemical space for the development of high energy density, low cost Li-ion cathodes. We develop a strategy for obtaining optimized compositions within this class of materials, exhibiting high capacity and energy density as well as good reversibility, by using a combination of low-valence transition metal redox and a high-valence redox active charge compensator, as well as fluorine substitution for oxygen. Furthermore, we identify a new constraint on high-performance compositions by demonstrating the necessity of excess Li capacity as a means of counteracting high-voltage tetrahedral Li formation, Li-binding by fluorine and the associated irreversibility. Specifically, we demonstrate that 10–12% of Li capacity is lost due to tetrahedral Li formation, and 0.4–0.8 Li per F dopant is made inaccessible at moderate voltages due to Li–F binding. We demonstrate the success of this strategy by realizing a series of high-performance disordered oxyfluoride cathode materials based on Mn2+/4+ and V4+/5+ redox.

BT - Energy & Environmental Science DA - 05/2018 DO - 10.1039/c8ee00816g IS - 8 LA - eng N2 -

The discovery of facile Li transport in disordered, Li-excess rocksalt materials has opened a vast new chemical space for the development of high energy density, low cost Li-ion cathodes. We develop a strategy for obtaining optimized compositions within this class of materials, exhibiting high capacity and energy density as well as good reversibility, by using a combination of low-valence transition metal redox and a high-valence redox active charge compensator, as well as fluorine substitution for oxygen. Furthermore, we identify a new constraint on high-performance compositions by demonstrating the necessity of excess Li capacity as a means of counteracting high-voltage tetrahedral Li formation, Li-binding by fluorine and the associated irreversibility. Specifically, we demonstrate that 10–12% of Li capacity is lost due to tetrahedral Li formation, and 0.4–0.8 Li per F dopant is made inaccessible at moderate voltages due to Li–F binding. We demonstrate the success of this strategy by realizing a series of high-performance disordered oxyfluoride cathode materials based on Mn2+/4+ and V4+/5+ redox.

PY - 2018 SP - 2159 EP - 2171 ST - Energy Environ. Sci. T2 - Energy & Environmental Science TI - Design principles for high transition metal capacity in disordered rocksalt Li-ion cathodes VL - 11 SN - 1754-5692 ER -