Abstract

As developments in lithium-ion batteries have focused on improving energy density, cycle life, and reducing cost, an important class of layered oxides with excess lithium, Li[Li,Ni,Mn,Co]O2, has been heavily studied as a next-generation electrode material. However, our limited understanding of the underlying electrochemical mechanisms hinders our ability to mitigate the negative impacts of these mechanisms, preventing commercialization. Previous studies have shown that these materials show a myriad of simultaneous mechanisms including changes in the nickel oxidation state, reversible oxygen redox accounting for capacities exceeding the theoretical limit1, oxygen gas release decreasing cycle efficiency2, as well as structural transformations leading to voltage fade3. Due to this complex mixture of electrochemical processes, model systems have been used extensively to observe these processes one at a time.This work on model systems is continued here by studying materials that show both nickel and oxygen redox but no structural transformations during cycling. This builds on work performed on Li-Fe-Sb-O and Li-Fe-Te-O where oxygen gas release was found to reduce Fe during charging of the electrode, an unexpected observation that had not been seen in other materials4. Given the use of nickel rather than iron in next-generation materials, herein we use Li-Ni-Sb-O and Li-Ni-Te-O as model systems to better understand the electrochemical contribution of Ni and O during cycling. The materials have been studied using extensive electrochemical tests, ex-situ powder X-ray diffraction, online electrochemical mass spectrometry, X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy and X-ray photoemission spectroscopy. Results show limited oxygen release from the particle surfaces only, coupled with a marked contrast between the nickel oxidation states at the surface (XPS) and those of the bulk of the particles (XANES). XPS data also demonstrates a slight reduction in surface nickel during oxygen gas release, confirming that the mechanism identified with Li-Fe-Sb-O does in fact occur in Ni-containing materials, though this is limited to the particle surface. Given that a great deal of work is currently being done to maximize the amount of nickel in next-generation electrode material, the consequences of nickel use in Li-rich oxides observed here are of high importance to further our understanding of the limitations of these materials that are currently preventing their commercialization. 1. McCalla, E. et al, Science 2015, 350 (6267), 1516.2. Jung, R. et al, Journal of The Electrochemical Society 2017, 164 (7), A1361-A1377.3. Gallagher, K. G et al, Electrochemistry Communications 2013, 33, 96-98.4. McCalla, E. et al, Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015, 137 (14), 4804-4814.

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