4.8 Article

Understanding the Thermal and Mechanical Stabilities of Olivine-Type LiMPO4 (M = Fe, Mn) as Cathode Materials for Rechargeable Lithium Batteries from First Principles

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 4033-4042

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am4054833

Keywords

cathode material; lithium iron phosphate; lithium manganese phosphate; thermal stability; mechanical stability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21301052, 51274002, 21173072]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province [B201003]
  3. Key Laboratory of Functional Inorganic Material Chemistry (Heilongjiang University, Ministry of Education)
  4. Specialized Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education [20132301120001]
  5. Program for Innovative Research Team in Anhui University of Technology [TD201202]

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To elucidate the microscopic origin of the difference behaviors, first-principles calculations were performed to investigate the thermal and mechanical stabilities of LixFePO4 and LixMnPO4. The calculated free energies suggested that LiFePO4 and LiMnPO4 are thermal stable with respect to relevant oxides both in their pristine and fully delithiated states. According to the calculations, it can be identified that the shear deformations are more easier to occur with respect to the volume compressions in LixFePO4 and LixMnPO4, and this phenomenon is related to M-O(I) and M-O(II) bonds. Typically for MnPO4, Li+ extraction from the host structures further weakens the Mn-O(I) bonds by about 33%, and it thus becomes very brittle. The shear anisotropy (A(G)) of MnPO4 is abnormally large and has already reached 19.05 %, which is about 6 times as large as that of FePO4. Therefore, shear deformations and dislocations occur easily in MnPO4. Moreover, as the Mn-O(I) bonds in MnPO4 are mainly spread within the {101} and {(1) over bar 01} crystal planes, the relevant slip systems thus allow the recombination of bonds at the interfaces, leading to the experimentally observed phase transformation. It can be concluded that mechanical reason will play an important role for the poor cycling performance of MnPO4.

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