TY - JOUR AU - Tzu‐Yang Huang AU - Zijian Cai AU - Matthew J Crafton AU - Lori A Kaufman AU - Zachary M Konz AU - Helen K Bergstrom AU - Elyse A Kedzie AU - Han‐Ming Hao AU - Gerbrand Ceder AU - Bryan D McCloskey AB -

Pronounced voltage hysteresis in Li-excess cathode materials is commonly thought to be associated with oxygen redox. However, these materials often possess overlapping oxygen and transition-metal redox, whose contributions to hysteresis between charge and discharge are challenging to distinguish. In this work, a two-step aqueous redox titration is developed with the aid of mass spectrometry (MS) to quantify oxidized lattice oxygen and Mn3+ /4+ redox in a representative Li-excess cation-disordered rock salt—Li1.2Mn0.4Ti0.4O2 (LMTO). Two MS-countable gas molecules evolve from two separate titrant-analyte reactions, thereby allowing Mn and O redox capacities to be decoupled. The decoupled O and Mn redox coulombic efficiencies are close to 100% for the LMTO cathode, indicating high charge-compensation reversibility. As incremental Mn and O redox capacities are quantitatively decoupled, each redox voltage hysteresis is further evaluated. Overall, LMTO voltage hysteresis arises not only from an intrinsic charge-discharge voltage mismatch related to O redox, but also from asymmetric Mn-redox overvoltages. The results reveal that O and Mn redox both contribute substantially to voltage hysteresis. This work further shows the potential of designing new analytical workflows to experimentally quantify key properties, even in a disordered material having complex local coordination environments.

BT - Advanced Energy Materials DA - 06/2023 DO - 10.1002/aenm.202300241 IS - 21 LA - eng N2 -

Pronounced voltage hysteresis in Li-excess cathode materials is commonly thought to be associated with oxygen redox. However, these materials often possess overlapping oxygen and transition-metal redox, whose contributions to hysteresis between charge and discharge are challenging to distinguish. In this work, a two-step aqueous redox titration is developed with the aid of mass spectrometry (MS) to quantify oxidized lattice oxygen and Mn3+ /4+ redox in a representative Li-excess cation-disordered rock salt—Li1.2Mn0.4Ti0.4O2 (LMTO). Two MS-countable gas molecules evolve from two separate titrant-analyte reactions, thereby allowing Mn and O redox capacities to be decoupled. The decoupled O and Mn redox coulombic efficiencies are close to 100% for the LMTO cathode, indicating high charge-compensation reversibility. As incremental Mn and O redox capacities are quantitatively decoupled, each redox voltage hysteresis is further evaluated. Overall, LMTO voltage hysteresis arises not only from an intrinsic charge-discharge voltage mismatch related to O redox, but also from asymmetric Mn-redox overvoltages. The results reveal that O and Mn redox both contribute substantially to voltage hysteresis. This work further shows the potential of designing new analytical workflows to experimentally quantify key properties, even in a disordered material having complex local coordination environments.

PY - 2023 ST - Advanced Energy Materials T2 - Advanced Energy Materials TI - Quantitative Decoupling of Oxygen‐Redox and Manganese‐Redox Voltage Hysteresis in a Cation‐Disordered Rock Salt Cathode UR - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/16146840/13/21 VL - 13 SN - 1614-6832 ER -