The
rapidly growing demand of electrical vehicles (EVs) requires
high-energy-density lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) with excellent cycling
stability and safety performance. However, conventional polycrystalline
high-Ni cathodes severely suffer from intrinsic chemomechanical degradation
and fast capacity fade. The emerging single-crystallization strategy
offers a promising pathway to improve the cathode’s chemomechanical
stability; however, the single-crystallinity of the cathode is not
always guaranteed, and residual grain boundaries (GBs) could persist
in nonideal synthesis conditions, leading to the formation of “quasi-single-crystalline”
(QSC) cathodes. So far, there has been a lack of understanding of
the influence of these residual GBs on the electrochemical performance
and structural stability. Herein, we investigate the degradation pathway
of a QSC high-Ni cathode through transmission electron microscopy
and X-ray techniques. The residual GBs caused by insufficient calcination
time dramatically exacerbate the cathode’s chemomechanical
instability and cycling performance. Our work offers important guidance
for next-generation cathodes for long-life LIBs