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1.
Inorg Chem ; 61(14): 5637-5652, 2022 Apr 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35360905

RESUMO

A broad range of cationic nonstoichiometry has been demonstrated for the Li-rich layered rock-salt-type oxide Li2MoO3, which has generally been considered as a phase with a well-defined chemical composition. Li2+xMo1-xO3 (-0.037 ≤ x ≤ 0.124) solid solutions were synthesized via hydrogen reduction of Li2MoO4 in the temperature range of 650-1100 °C, with x decreasing with the increase of the reduction temperature. The solid solutions adopt a monoclinically distorted O3-type layered average structure and demonstrate a robust local ordering of the Li cations and Mo3 triangular clusters within the mixed Li/Mo cationic layers. The local structure was scrutinized in detail by electron diffraction and aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microcopy (STEM), resulting in an ordering model comprising a uniform distribution of the Mo3 clusters compatible with local electroneutrality and chemical composition. The geometry of the triangular clusters with their oxygen environment (Mo3O13 groups) has been directly visualized using differential phase contrast STEM imaging. The established local structure was used as input for density functional theory (DFT)-based calculations; they support the proposed atomic arrangement and provide a plausible explanation for the staircase galvanostatic charge profiles upon electrochemical Li+ extraction from Li2+xMo1-xO3 in Li cells. According to DFT, all electrochemical capacity in Li2+xMo1-xO3 solely originates from the cationic Mo redox process, which proceeds via oxidation of the Mo3 triangular clusters into bent Mo3 chains where the electronic capacity of the clusters depends on the initial chemical composition and Mo oxidation state defining the width of the first charge low-voltage plateau. Further oxidation at the high-voltage plateau proceeds through decomposition of the Mo3 chains into Mo2 dimers and further into individual Mo6+ cations.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(35): 39907-39916, 2022 Sep 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36007961

RESUMO

All-solid-state batteries primarily focus on macrocrystalline solid electrolyte/cathode interfaces, and little is explored on the growth and stability of nanograined Li-garnet and cathode ones. In this work, a thin (∼500 nm) film of LiCoO2 (LCO) has been grown on top of the polycrystalline layer of Ta-doped Li7La3Zr2O12 (Ta-LLZO) solid electrolyte using the pulsed laser deposition (PLD) technique. Scanning transmission electron microscopy, electron diffraction, and electron tomography demonstrated that the LCO film is formed by columnar elements with the shape of inverted cones. The film appears to be highly textured, with the (003) LCO crystal planes parallel to the LCO/Ta-LLZO interface and with internal pores shaped by the {104} and {102} planes. According to density functional theory (DFT) calculations, this specific microstructure is governed by a competition between free energies of the corresponding crystal planes, which in turn depends on the oxygen and lithium chemical potentials during the deposition, indicating that thermodynamics plays an important role in the resulting LCO microstructure even under nonequilibrium PLD conditions. Based on the thermodynamic estimates, the experimental conditions within the LCO stability domain are proposed for the preferential {104} LCO orientation, which is considered favorable for enhanced Li diffusion in the positive electrode layers of all-solid-state batteries.

3.
RSC Adv ; 11(46): 28593-28601, 2021 Aug 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35478592

RESUMO

The Li-based layered nickel-tin oxide Li0.35Na0.07Ni0.5Sn0.5O2 has been synthesized via electrochemically-driven Li+ for Na+ exchange in O3-NaNi0.5Sn0.5O2. The crystal structure of Li0.35Na0.07Ni0.5Sn0.5O2 was Rietveld-refined from powder X-ray diffraction data (a = 3.03431(7) Å, c = 14.7491(8) Å, S. G. R3̄m). It preserves the O3 stacking sequence of the parent compound, but with ∼13% lower unit cell volume. Electron diffraction and atomic-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy imaging revealed short-range Ni/Sn ordering in both the pristine and Li-exchanged materials that is similar to the "honeycomb" Li/M ordering in Li2MO3 oxides. As supported by bond-valence sum and density functional theory calculations, this ordering is driven by charge difference between Ni2+ and Sn4+ and the necessity to maintain balanced bonding for the oxygen anions. Li0.35Na0.07Ni0.5Sn0.5O2 demonstrates reversible electrochemical (de)intercalation of ∼0.21 Li+ in the 2.8-4.3 V vs. Li/Li+ potential range. Limited electrochemical activity is attributed to a formation of the surface Li/Ni disordered rock-salt barrier layer as the Li+ for Na+ exchange drastically reduces the energy barrier for the Li/Ni antisite disorder.

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