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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(30): 20951-20962, 2024 Jul 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39038275

RESUMEN

Conventional Li-ion battery intercalation cathodes leverage charge compensation that is formally associated with redox on the transition metal. Employing the anions in the charge compensation mechanism, so-called anion redox, can yield higher capacities beyond the traditional limitations of intercalation chemistry. Here, we aim to understand the structural considerations that enable anion oxidation and focus on processes that result in structural changes, such as the formation of persulfide bonds. Using a Li-rich metal sulfide as a model system, we present both first-principles simulations and experimental data that show that cation vacancies are required for anion oxidation. First-principles simulations show that the oxidation of sulfide to persulfide only occurs when a neighboring vacancy is present. To experimentally probe the role of vacancies in anion redox processes, we introduce vacancies into the Li2TiS3 phase while maintaining a high valency of Ti. When the cation sublattice is fully occupied and no vacancies can be formed through transition metal oxidation, the material is electrochemically inert. Upon introduction of vacancies, the material can support high degrees of anion redox, even in the absence of transition metal oxidation. The model system offers fundamental insights to deepen our understanding of structure-property relationships that govern reversible anion redox in sulfides and demonstrates that cation vacancies are required for anion oxidation, in which persulfides are formed.

2.
Chem Mater ; 36(13): 6454-6463, 2024 Jul 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39005531

RESUMEN

New energy storage methods are emerging to increase the energy density of state-of-the-art battery systems beyond conventional intercalation electrode materials. For instance, employing anion redox can yield higher capacities compared with transition metal redox alone. Anion redox in sulfides has been recognized since the early days of rechargeable battery research. Here, we study the effect of d-p overlap in controlling anion redox by shifting the metal d band position relative to the S p band. We aim to determine the effect of shifting the d band position on the electronic structure and, ultimately, on charge compensation. Two isostructural sulfides LiNaFeS2 and LiNaCoS2 are directly compared to the hypothesis that the Co material should yield more covalent metal-anion bonds. LiNaCoS2 exhibits a multielectron capacity of ≥1.7 electrons per formula unit, but despite the lowered Co d band, the voltage of anion redox is close to that of LiNaFeS2. Interestingly, the material suffers from rapid capacity fade. Through a combination of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, Co and S X-ray absorption spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and partial density of states calculations, we demonstrate that oxidation of S nonbonding p states to S2 2- occurs in early states of charge, which leads to an irreversible phase transition. We conclude that the lower energy of Co d bands increases their overlap with S p bands while maintaining S nonbonding p states at the same higher energy level, thus causing no alteration in the oxidation potential. Further, the higher crystal field stabilization energy for octahedral coordination over tetrahedral coordination is proposed to cause the irreversible phase transition in LiNaCoS2.

3.
Chem Mater ; 36(11): 5687-5697, 2024 Jun 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38883428

RESUMEN

Conventional intercalation-based cathode materials in Li-ion batteries are based on charge compensation of the redox-active cation and can only intercalate one mole of electron per formula unit. Anion redox, which employs the anion sublattice to compensate charge, is a promising way to achieve multielectron cathode materials. Most anion redox materials still face the problems of slow kinetics and large voltage hysteresis. One potential solution to reduce voltage hysteresis is to increase the covalency of the metal-ligand bonds. By substituting Mn into the electrochemically inert Li1.33Ti0.67S2 (Li2TiS3), anion redox can be activated in the Li1.33-2y/3Ti0.67-y/3Mn y S2 (y = 0-0.5) series. Not only do we observe substantial anion redox, but the voltage hysteresis is significantly reduced, and the rate capability is dramatically enhanced. The y = 0.3 phase exhibits excellent rate and cycling performance, maintaining 90% of the C/10 capacity at 1C, which indicates fast kinetics for anion redox. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) shows that both the cation and anion redox processes contribute to the charge compensation. We attribute the drop in hysteresis and increase in rate performance to the increased covalency between the metal and the anion. Electrochemical signatures suggest the anion redox mechanism resembles holes on the anion, but the S K-edge XAS data confirm persulfide formation. The mechanism of anion redox shows that forming persulfides can be a low hysteresis, high rate capability mechanism enabled by the appropriate metal-ligand covalency. This work provides insights into how to design cathode materials with anion redox to achieve fast kinetics and low voltage hysteresis.

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