Abstract

AbstractThe extensive applications of spinel LiMn2O4 (LMO) are severely plagued by grievous capacity degradation and structural collapse, mainly ascribed to deleterious Jahn−Teller distortion and subsequent dissolution of Mn2+. Herein, highly stable LMO with atomic interlocking effect is rationally designed via engineering Al into the unoccupied 16c sites. The local coordination environment of the surficial MnO6 octahedron is reconstructed by robust Al−O band coherency, giving strengthened lattice oxygen skeleton and constraining heterophase evolution with the suppression of Jahn−Teller distortion, validated by theoretical calculations coupled with synchrotron X‐ray absorption spectrum. Concomitantly, with the occupation of Al in interstitial site, the migration of Mn is effectively restrained, directly observed by scanning transmission electron microscopy, leading to the inhibition of inactivation as well as dissolution loss of Mn. Resultantly, splendid long cycling stability of Al‐LMO after 1000 loops with only 0.019% capacity fading per cycle is presented. Given this, this elaborate study can provide an ingenious avenue for regulating the structure/interface chemistry architecture in electrode materials.

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