4.7 Article

Grain Boundaries as a Diffusion-Limiting Factor in Lithium-Rich NMC Cathodes for High-Energy Lithium-Ion Batteries

Journal

ACS APPLIED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 4, Issue 7, Pages 6777-6786

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaem.1c00872

Keywords

Li-rich layered oxides; cathodes; grain boundaries; diffusion; transmission electron microscopy

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [20-43-01012]
  2. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO Vlaanderen) [G0F1320N]
  3. Russian Science Foundation [20-43-01012] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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High-energy lithium-rich layered transition metal oxides exhibit complex electrochemical behavior due to interactions between crystal, electronic, and defect structures. This study reveals that grain boundary microstructures, particularly Na-enriched regions, have a significant impact on the rate capability of Li-rich cathodes, affecting the diffusion of Li+ ions.
High-energy lithium-rich layered transition metal oxides are capable of delivering record electrochemical capacity and energy density as positive electrodes for Li-ion batteries. Their electrochemical behavior is extremely complex due to sophisticated interplay between crystal structure, electronic structure, and defect structure. Here we unravel an extra level of this complexity by revealing that the most typical representative Li1.2Ni0.13Mn0.54Co0.13O2 material, prepared by a conventional coprecipitation technique with Na2CO3 as a precipitating agent, contains abundant coherent (001) grain boundaries with a Na-enriched P2-structured block due to segregation of the residual sodium traces. The trigonal prismatic oxygen coordination of Na triggers multiple nanoscale twinning, giving rise to incoherent (104) boundaries. The cationic layers at the (001) grain boundaries are filled with transition metal cations being Mn-depleted and Co-enriched; this makes them virtually not permeable for the Li+ cations, and therefore they negatively influence the Li diffusion in and out of the spherical agglomerates. These results demonstrate that besides the mechanisms intrinsic to the crystal and electronic structure of Li-rich cathodes, their rate capability might also be depreciated by peculiar microstructural aspects. Dedicated engineering of grain boundaries opens a way for improving inherently sluggish kinetics of these materials.

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