Abstract

We present a comprehensive study of cycled high-Ni (LiNi1-xMxO2, M = metals), Li-rich (Li1+xMnyM1-x-yO2), and high-voltage spinel (LiMn1.5Ni0.5O4) electrodes with time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy in conjunction with electrochemical techniques to better understand their evolving cathode-electrolyte interphase structure during cycling. TOF-SIMS provides fragment-specific information regarding the surface film content for each of the electrodes. High-Ni cathodes show thick surface films initially containing Li2CO3, later developing oxidized organic carbonates throughout cycling. Li-rich electrode surface films develop strong characteristics during their first activation cycles, where released O2 oxidizes organic carbonates to form polymeric carbons and decomposes LiPF6. High-voltage spinel electrodes operate outside the standard electrolyte stability window, generating reactive oxidized electrolyte species that further decompose LiPF6. The distribution and concentration of these different chemical fragments measured by TOF-SIMS are finally summarized by color-coded high-resolution images of cycled high-Ni, Li-rich, and high-voltage spinel electrodes.

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