4.6 Article

Two-dimensional transition-metal oxide monolayers as cathode materials for Li and Na ion batteries

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 18, Issue 10, Pages 7527-7534

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c5cp07357j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Science and Technology Development Fund from Macau SAR [FDCT-068/2014/A2, FDCT-132/2014/A3, FDCT-110/2014/SB]
  2. Multi-Year Research Grant from the Research AMP
  3. Development Office at University of Macau [MYRG2014-00159-FST, MYRG2015-00017-FST]
  4. Science and Technology Development Fund of Macao SAR [045/2014/A1]
  5. Multi-year Research Grant, University Research Committee, University of Macau [MYRG2015-00042-FST]

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Two-dimensional monolayers are attractive for applications in metal-ion batteries because of their low ion-diffusion barrier and volume expansion. In this work, we carry out a first-principles study on electrochemical and structural properties of two-dimensional (2D) oxide monolayers and investigate their applications in metal-ion batteries. 2D transition-metal oxide monolayers (MO2; M = Mn, Co, and Ni) with various ion-intercalation densities are systematically studied. Our calculations show that Li and Na atoms can easily be transported on the surfaces of the monolayers with low diffusion barriers because of the long binding distance. We find that Li2MO2 and Na2MO2 are stable because of negative intercalation energies and unsaturated specific energies. We show that MnO2 has the lowest diffusion barrier, highest specific capacity, and smallest lattice expansion under Li-intercalation, but lowest cell voltage. We also find that CoO2 shows the largest cell voltages in a wide range of ion-intercalation densities and smallest lattice expansion under Na-intercalation, and NiO2 only gives the highest cell voltage in Li2NiO2 and has the largest volume expansion. We further show that Li and Na atoms in Li2MO2 and Na2MO2 move from stable-adsorption sites to metastable sites on the surfaces of oxide monolayers to reduce lattice expansion, leading to reduced cell voltages. It is expected that metal-ion batteries with particular applications and performances can be achieved in the design of these oxide monolayers.

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