206 research outputs found

    Feasibility and Limitations of High-Voltage Lithium-Iron-Manganese Spinels

    Get PDF
    Positive electrodes with high energy densities for Lithium-ion batteries (LIB) almost exclusively rely on toxic and costly transition metals. Iron based high voltage spinels can be feasible alternatives, but the phase stabilities and optimal chemistries for LIB applications are not fully understood yet. In this study, LiFex_{x}Mn2−x_{2-x}O4_{4} spinels with x = 0.2 to 0.9 were synthesized by solid-state reaction at 800 °C. High-resolution diffraction methods reveal gradual increasing partial spinel inversion as a function of x and early secondary phase formation. Mössbauer spectroscopy was used to identify the Fe valences, spin states and coordination. The unexpected increasing lattice parameters with Fe substitution for Mn was explained considering the anion-cation average bond lengths determined by Rietveld analysis and Mn3+^{3+} overstoichiometries revealed by cyclic voltammetry. Finally, galvanostatic cycling of Li-Fe-Mn-spinels shows that the capacity fading is correlated to increased cell polarization for higher upper charging cut-off voltage, Fe-content and C-rate. The electrolyte may also contribute significantly to the cycling limitations

    Revealing defects in crystalline lithium-ion battery electrodes by solid state NMR: applications to LiVPO4F

    Get PDF
    International audienceIdentifying and characterizing defects in crystalline solids is a challenging problem, particularly for lithium-ion intercalation materials, which often exhibit multiple stable oxidation and spin states as well as local ordering of lithium and charges. Here, we reveal the existence of characteristic lithium defect environments in the crystalline lithium-ion battery electrode LiVPO4F and establish the relative subnanometer-scale proximities between them. Well-crystallized LiVPO4F samples were synthesized with the expected tavorite-like structure, as established by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) measurements. Solid-state 7Li nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra reveal unexpected paramagnetic 7Li environments that can account for up to 20% of the total lithium content. Multidimensional and site-selective solid-state 7Li NMR experiments using finite-pulse radio frequency-driven recoupling (fp-RFDR) establish unambiguously that the unexpected lithium environments are associated with defects within the LiVPO4F crystal structure, revealing the existence of dipole–dipole-coupled defect pairs. The lithium defects exhibit local electronic environments that are distinct from lithium ions in the crystallographic LiVPO4F site, which result from altered oxidation and/or spin states of nearby paramagnetic vanadium atoms. The results provide a general strategy for identifying and characterizing lithium defect environments in crystalline solids, including paramagnetic materials with short 7Li NMR relaxation times on the order of milliseconds
    • 

    corecore