%0 Journal Article %A Liliang Huang %A Peichen Zhong %A Yang Ha %A Zijian Cai %A Young‐Woon Byeon %A Tzu‐Yang Huang %A Yingzhi Sun %A Fengyu Xie %A Han‐Ming Hau %A Haegyeom Kim %A Mahalingam Balasubramanian %A Bryan D McCloskey %A Wanli Yang %A Gerbrand Ceder %B Advanced Energy Materials %D 2023 %G eng %N 4 %P 2202345 %R 10.1002/aenm.202202345 %T Optimizing Li‐Excess Cation‐Disordered Rocksalt Cathode Design Through Partial Li Deficiency %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/16146840/13/4 %V 13 %8 01/2023 %! Advanced Energy Materials %X
Li-excess disordered rocksalts (DRXs) are emerging as promising cathode materials for Li-ion batteries due to their ability to use earth-abundant transition metals. In this work, a new strategy based on partial Li deficiency engineering is introduced to optimize the overall electrochemical performance of DRX cathodes. Specifically, by using Mn-based DRX as a proof-of-concept, it is demonstrated that the introduction of cation vacancies during synthesis (e.g., Li1.3-xMn2+0.4-xMn3+xNb0.3O1.6F0.4, x = 0, 0.2, and 0.4) improves both the discharge capacity and rate performance due to the more favored short-range order in the presence of Mn3+. Density functional theory calculations and Monte Carlo simulations, in combination with spectroscopic tools, reveal that introducing 10% vacancies (Li1.1Mn2+0.2Mn3+0.2Nb0.3O1.6F0.4) enables both Mn2+/Mn3+ redox and excellent Li percolation. However, a more aggressive vacancy doping (e.g., 20% vacancies in Li0.9Mn3+0.4Nb0.3O1.6F0.4) impairs performance because it induces phase separation between an Mn-rich and a Li-rich phase.