Abstract

Understanding the mechanism of slow lithium ion (Li+) transport kinetics in LiFePO4 is not only practically important for high power density batteries but also fundamentally significant as a prototypical ion-coupled electron transfer process. Substantial evidence has shown that the slow ion transport kinetics originates from the coupled transfer between electrons and ions and the phase segregation of Li+. Combining a model Hamiltonian analysis and DFT calculations, we reveal that electrostatic interactions play a decisive role in coupled charge transfer and Li+ segregation. The obtained potential energy surfaces prove that ion-electron coupled transfer is the optimal reaction pathway due to electrostatic attractions between Li+ and e- (Fe2+), while prohibitively large energy barriers are required for separate electron tunneling or ion hopping to overcome the electrostatic energy between the Li+-e- (Fe2+) pair. The model reveals that Li+-Li+ repulsive interaction in the [010] transport channels together with Li+-e- (Fe2+)-Li+ attractive interaction along the [100] direction cause the phase segregation of Li+. It explains why the thermodynamically stable phase interface between Li-rich and Li-poor phases in LiFePO4 is perpendicular to [010] channels.

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