TY - JOUR AU - Zengqing Zhuo AU - Kehua Dai AU - Ruimin Qiao AU - Rui Wang AU - Jinpeng Wu AU - Yali Liu AU - Jiayue Peng AU - Liquan Chen AU - Yi- de Chuang AU - Feng Pan AU - Zhi-xun Shen AU - Gao Liu AU - Hong Li AU - Thomas P Devereaux AU - Wanli Yang AB -

Li2MnO3 has been considered to be a representative Li-rich compound with active debates on oxygen activities. Here, by evaluating the Mn and O states in the bulk and on the surface of Li2MnO3, we clarify that Mn(III/IV) redox dominates the reversible bulk redox in Li2MnO3, while the initial charge plateau is from surface reactions with oxygen release and carbonate decomposition. No lattice oxygen redox is involved at any electrochemical stage. The carbonate formation and decomposition indicate the catalytic property of the Li2MnO3 surface, which inspires Li-CO2/air batteries with Li2MnO3 acting as a superior electrocatalyst. The absence of lattice oxygen redox in Li2MnO3 questions the origin of the oxygen redox in Li-rich compounds, which is found to be of the same nature as that in conventional materials based on spectroscopic comparisons. These findings provide guidelines on understanding and controlling oxygen activities toward high-energy cathodes and suggest opportunities on using alkali-rich materials for catalytic reactions.

BT - Joule DA - 04/2021 DO - 10.1016/j.joule.2021.02.004 IS - 4 LA - eng N2 -

Li2MnO3 has been considered to be a representative Li-rich compound with active debates on oxygen activities. Here, by evaluating the Mn and O states in the bulk and on the surface of Li2MnO3, we clarify that Mn(III/IV) redox dominates the reversible bulk redox in Li2MnO3, while the initial charge plateau is from surface reactions with oxygen release and carbonate decomposition. No lattice oxygen redox is involved at any electrochemical stage. The carbonate formation and decomposition indicate the catalytic property of the Li2MnO3 surface, which inspires Li-CO2/air batteries with Li2MnO3 acting as a superior electrocatalyst. The absence of lattice oxygen redox in Li2MnO3 questions the origin of the oxygen redox in Li-rich compounds, which is found to be of the same nature as that in conventional materials based on spectroscopic comparisons. These findings provide guidelines on understanding and controlling oxygen activities toward high-energy cathodes and suggest opportunities on using alkali-rich materials for catalytic reactions.

PY - 2021 SP - 975 EP - 997 ST - Joule T2 - Joule TI - Cycling mechanism of Li2MnO3: Li–CO2 batteries and commonality on oxygen redox in cathode materials UR - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2542435121000817 VL - 5 SN - 25424351 ER -