Surface Stabilization with Fluorine of Layered Ultrahigh-Nickel Oxide Cathodes for Lithium-Ion Batteries Published as part of the Virtual Special Issue ?John Goodenough at 100?. br

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS(2022)

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摘要
High-nickel layered oxide cathodes are key to meet the demands of the electric vehicle industry because of their high specific capacity. However, commercialization of these materials is hindered by critical challenges, such as phase transitions, particle cracking, aggressive surface reactivity, and thermal instability. Cation doping along with surface coating has proven to be an effective way to circumvent some of these issues to a large extent. Herein, fluorine coating is employed on a high-nickel Li[Ni0.95Mn0.015Co0.02Al0.01Mg0.005]O2 (NMCAM) cathode via a solution route. Detailed structural and electrochemical analyses indicate fluorine largely decorates the surface at low enough calcination temperatures. The cathode with 1 mol % fluorine coating exhibits a capacity retention of 71% after 500 cycles as compared to 59% for the control sample when cycled to a high cutoff voltage of 4.3 V in a full cell configuration with graphite anode. Post-mortem analysis of cycled electrodes reveals that surface reactivity is a major contributor to capacity fade as compared to particle cracking. Fluorine coating reduces surface reactivity and the depth to which rock-salt phase is formed on the surface during cycling. The thermal stability is also enhanced after fluorine coating as the material shows less heat release at high states of charge. This work demonstrates an effective, economical, and scalable way to stabilize the surface with fluorine and enhance the electrochemical performance of high-nickel cathodes.
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