Regulating Surface Oxygen Activity by Perovskite-Coating-Stabilized Ultrahigh-Nickel Layered Oxide Cathodesopen access
- Authors
- Wang, Lifan; Liu, Guicheng; Wang, Rui; Wang, Xindong; Wang, Liguang; Yao, Zhenpeng; Zhan, Chun; Lu, Jun
- Issue Date
- Mar-2023
- Publisher
- Wiley-VCH GmbH
- Keywords
- anionic redox; dual-ion conductors; oxygen interstitials; oxygen vacancies; ultrahigh-Ni layered oxides
- Citation
- Advanced Materials, v.35, no.11
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Advanced Materials
- Volume
- 35
- Number
- 11
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/21307
- DOI
- 10.1002/adma.202209483
- ISSN
- 0935-9648
1521-4095
- Abstract
- Ultrahigh-Ni layered oxides are proposed as promising cathodes to fulfill the range demand of electric vehicles; yet, they are still haunted by compromised cyclability and thermal robustness. State-of-the-art surface coating has been applied to solve the instability via blocking the physical contact between the electrolyte and the highly active Ni4+ ions on the cathode surface, but it falls short in handling the chemo-physical mobility of the oxidized lattice oxygen ions in the cathode. Herein, a direct regulation strategy is proposed to accommodate the highly active anionic redox within the solid phase. By leveraging the stable oxygen vacancies/interstitials in a lithium and oxygen dual-ion conductor (layered perovskite La4NiLiO8) coating layer, the reactivity of the surface lattice oxygen ion is dramatically restrained. As a result, the oxygen release from the lattice is suppressed, as well as the undesired irreversible phase transition and intergranular mechanical cracking. Meanwhile, the introduced dual-ion conductor can also facilitate lithium-ion diffusion kinetics and electronic conductivity on the particle surface. This work demonstrates that accommodating the anionic redox chemistry by dual-ion conductors is an effective strategy for capacity versus stability juggling of the high-energy cathodes.
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Collections - College of Natural Science > Division of Physics & Semiconductor Science > 1. Journal Articles

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