Abstract

Multinary lithium oxides with the rock salt structure are of technological importance as cathode materials in rechargeable lithium ion batteries. Current state-of-the-art cathodes such as LiNi1/3Mn1/3Co1/3O2 rely on redox cycling of earth-abundant transition-metal cations to provide charge capacity. Recently, the possibility of using the oxide anion as a redox center in Li-rich rock salt oxides has been established as a new paradigm in the design of cathode materials with enhanced capacities (>200 mAh/g). To increase the lithium content and access electrons from oxygen-derived states, these materials typically require transition metals in high oxidation states, which can be easily achieved using d0 cations. However, Li-rich rock salt oxides with high valent d0 cations such as Nb5+ and Mo6+ show strikingly high voltage hysteresis between charge and discharge, the origin of which is uninvestigated. In this work, we study a series of Li-rich compounds, Li4+xNi1–xWO6 (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.25) adopting two new and distinct cation-ordered variants of the rock salt structure. The Li4.15Ni0.85WO6 (x = 0.15) phase has a large reversible capacity of 200 mAh/g, without accessing the Ni3+/Ni4+ redox couple, implying that more than two-thirds of the capacity is due to anionic redox, with good cyclability. The presence of the 5d0 W6+ cation affords extensive (>2 V) voltage hysteresis associated with the anionic redox. We present experimental evidence for the formation of strongly stabilized localized O–O single bonds that explain the energy penalty required to reduce the material upon discharge. The high valent d0 cation associates localized anion–anion bonding with the anion redox capacity.

Highlights

  • Li-containing rock salt oxides form one of the most studied families of positive electrodes for rechargeable lithium ion batteries

  • The maximum capacity of these materials is, still limited because of the 1:1 Li:M ratio, and great hope is being placed in the “Li-rich” rock salt oxides (LixMyOx+y with x > y) which can be accessed by partial substitution of the transition metal with excess Li associated with an increase in the mean metal oxidation state above +III (e.g., Li(Li1/3Mn2/3)O2 or Li2MnO3)

  • We investigate a family of Li-rich rock salt oxides Li4+xNi1−xWO6 (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.25) derived from the Li4NiWO6 phase reported by Mandal et al.[16] and vary the Li/Ni ratio to tune the structural and electrochemical properties of the material

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Summary

Introduction

Li-containing rock salt oxides form one of the most studied families of positive electrodes for rechargeable lithium ion batteries. The maximum capacity of these materials is, still limited because of the 1:1 Li:M ratio, and great hope is being placed in the “Li-rich” rock salt oxides (LixMyOx+y with x > y) which can be accessed by partial substitution of the transition metal with excess Li associated with an increase in the mean metal oxidation state above +III (e.g., Li(Li1/3Mn2/3)O2 or Li2MnO3). Such compounds can deliver capacities exceeding 200 mAh/g, making them promising cathode materials for future Li-ion rechargeable batteries. Chemistries that enable reversible oxygen oxidation with earth-abundant components would bring these capacities within practical reach

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