Hidden structural and chemical order controls lithium transport in cation-disordered oxides for rechargeable batteries

被引:0
作者
Huiwen Ji
Alexander Urban
Daniil A. Kitchaev
Deok-Hwang Kwon
Nongnuch Artrith
Colin Ophus
Wenxuan Huang
Zijian Cai
Tan Shi
Jae Chul Kim
Haegyeom Kim
Gerbrand Ceder
机构
[1] University of California Berkeley,Department of Materials Science and Engineering
[2] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Materials Sciences Division
[3] University of St Andrews,School of Chemistry
[4] Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Department of Materials Science and Engineering
[5] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,National Center for Electron Microscopy, Molecular Foundry
[6] Stevens Institute of Technology,Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
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Nature Communications | / 10卷
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摘要
Structure plays a vital role in determining materials properties. In lithium ion cathode materials, the crystal structure defines the dimensionality and connectivity of interstitial sites, thus determining lithium ion diffusion kinetics. In most conventional cathode materials that are well-ordered, the average structure as seen in diffraction dictates the lithium ion diffusion pathways. Here, we show that this is not the case in a class of recently discovered high-capacity lithium-excess rocksalts. An average structure picture is no longer satisfactory to understand the performance of such disordered materials. Cation short-range order, hidden in diffraction, is not only ubiquitous in these long-range disordered materials, but fully controls the local and macroscopic environments for lithium ion transport. Our discovery identifies a crucial property that has previously been overlooked and provides guidelines for designing and engineering cation-disordered cathode materials.
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