Abstract
Co/Ni-free layered oxides have garnered significant interest due to their environmental friendliness and facile synthesis methodologies, while facing major challenges of inferior cycling stability and rate capability. Addressing these drawbacks necessitates the enhancement of the surface properties of Co/Ni-free layered oxides. This work introduces a Co/Ni-free layered oxide, Na0.67Mn0.65Fe0.3Al0.05O2 (NMFA), which has been subjected to phosphate-based surface engineering. This targeted surface modification aims to augment the specific surface area and establish a protective layer on NMFA. Such improvements are critical for expanding the effective electrochemical reaction zone, broadening sodium ion diffusion pathways, curtailing the P2-OP4 phase transition, and reducing the activation energy for interfacial charge transfer. This multifaceted surface treatment epitomizes the ingenious design and realization of advanced Co/Ni-free layered oxide cathode materials through straightforward processing techniques. Notably, the NMFA subjected to 3%-AlPO4 surface modification demonstrated an initial discharge capacity of 189.1 mAh/g at 0.1C, maintaining its capacity after 500 cycles at 10C. Additionally, DFT calculations corroborate that such surface growth can bolster electrical conductivity, restrain oxygen liberation and foster sodium ion migration. This elucidates that the phosphate growth layer serves as the oxygen reservoir. Accordingly, this investigation propounds a promising avenue to circumvent the challenges confronting Co/Ni-free layered oxides, thus paving the way for the development of high-performance cathode materials.
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