4.3 Article

Unveiling ionic diffusion in MgNiMnO4 cathode material for Mg-ion batteries via combined computational and experimental studies

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOLID STATE ELECTROCHEMISTRY
Volume 23, Issue 11, Pages 3209-3216

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10008-019-04401-7

Keywords

Ionic diffusion; Density functional theory; DFT plus U; Mg-ion batteries; Transition metal oxides; Spinel structure

Funding

  1. ISAEF-Israel Strategic Alternative Energy Foundation
  2. INREP-2 [2nd Israel National Research on Electrochemical Propulsion]
  3. Morantz Energy Research Fund
  4. Nancy and Stephen Grand Technion Energy Program
  5. HITEC graduate school exchange program of Forschungszentrum Julich

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A major challenge in the field of rechargeable Mg batteries is the development of high voltage/high capacity cathode materials. Naturally, a first step in a general search of cathode materials for Mg batteries should be following the plethora of cathode materials relevant to Li-ion batteries. Indeed, several compounds that were thoroughly studied in connection to Li-ion batteries were found to interact reversibly with Mg ions, as well. The functionality of metal ion batteries relies on an efficient ionic transport within the electrodes' active mass. In this study, we examined the extreme case of the MgNiMnO4 material, using a combination of computational and experimental techniques. The scientific question being raised in this study was whether Mg ions can be extracted electrochemically from this compound. The experiments provided a negative answer and calculations based on density functional theory (DFT) + U showed that indeed Mg ions diffusion in this material is energetically unfavorable. It was confirmed again how computational work can be very useful in predicting barriers for ionic diffusion in hosts and hence, can save much of tedious experimental works.

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