Abstract

Sacrificial cathode additives have emerged as a tempting strategy to compensate the initial capacity loss (ICL) in Li-ion batteries (LIBs) manufacturing. However, the utilization of sacrificial cathode additives inevitably brings residuals, side reactions, and negative impacts in which relevant researches are still in the early stage. In this study, we conduct a systematic investigation on the effects of employing a nickel-based sacrificial additive, Li2Cu0.1Ni0.9O2 (LCNO), and propose a feasible strategy to achieve advantageous surface reconstruction on LCNO. Specifically, we build a Li5AlO4 (LAO) coating layer on the LCNO through dry ball milling and annealing treatment. This process not only consumes surface residual lithium compounds on LCNO but also demonstrates minimal detrimental effects on its performance. The surface reconstructed LCNO (SR-LCNO) reveals mitigated gas generation and suppressed structure degradation under high working voltage (>4.1 V), thereby causing negligible negative effects on the cycling capability and rate performance of commercial cathode materials. The full cells containing SR-LCNO deliver significantly improved electrochemical properties, with no observed exacerbation of side reactions. This work awakes the awareness of the prudent utilization of sacrificial cathode additives and provides an effective strategy for harmless pre-lithiation via surface reconstructed sacrificial cathode additives.

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