TY - JOUR
T1 - The sensitive surface chemistry of Co-free, Ni-rich layered oxides
T2 - identifying experimental conditions that influence characterization results
AU - Mu, Linqin
AU - Yang, Zhenzhong
AU - Tao, Lei
AU - Waters, Crystal K.
AU - Xu, Zhengrui
AU - Li, Luxi
AU - Sainio, Sami
AU - Du, Yingge
AU - Xin, Huolin L.
AU - Nordlund, Dennis
AU - Lin, Feng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020.
PY - 2020/9/14
Y1 - 2020/9/14
N2 - Recent studies have suggested that Co-free, Ni-rich layered cathodes (e.g., doped LiNiO2) can provide promising battery performance for practical applications. However, these layered cathodes suffer from significant surface instability during various stages of the sample history, which generates inherent challenges for achieving stable battery performance and obtaining statistically representative characterization results. To reliably report the surface chemistry of these materials, delicate controls of stepwise sample preparation are required. In this study, we aim to illustrate how the surface chemistry of LiNiO2based materials changes with various environments, including human exhalation, sample storage, sample preparation, electrochemical cycling, and surface doping. Our results demonstrate that the surface of these materials is highly reactive and prone to alter at various stages of sample handling and characterization. The sensitive surface could impact the interpretation of the surface chemical and structural information, including surface carbonate formation, transition metal reduction and dissolution, and surface reconstruction. Importantly, the heterogeneity of the surface degradation calls for a consolidation of nanoscale, high-resolution characterization and ensemble-averaged methods in order to improve statistical representation. Furthermore, the doping chemistry can effectively mitigate the surface degradation and improve overall battery performance due to the enhanced surface oxygen retention. Our study highlights the necessity of strict measurements through complementary characterization at multiple length scales to eliminate unintentional biased conclusions.
AB - Recent studies have suggested that Co-free, Ni-rich layered cathodes (e.g., doped LiNiO2) can provide promising battery performance for practical applications. However, these layered cathodes suffer from significant surface instability during various stages of the sample history, which generates inherent challenges for achieving stable battery performance and obtaining statistically representative characterization results. To reliably report the surface chemistry of these materials, delicate controls of stepwise sample preparation are required. In this study, we aim to illustrate how the surface chemistry of LiNiO2based materials changes with various environments, including human exhalation, sample storage, sample preparation, electrochemical cycling, and surface doping. Our results demonstrate that the surface of these materials is highly reactive and prone to alter at various stages of sample handling and characterization. The sensitive surface could impact the interpretation of the surface chemical and structural information, including surface carbonate formation, transition metal reduction and dissolution, and surface reconstruction. Importantly, the heterogeneity of the surface degradation calls for a consolidation of nanoscale, high-resolution characterization and ensemble-averaged methods in order to improve statistical representation. Furthermore, the doping chemistry can effectively mitigate the surface degradation and improve overall battery performance due to the enhanced surface oxygen retention. Our study highlights the necessity of strict measurements through complementary characterization at multiple length scales to eliminate unintentional biased conclusions.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85090955725
U2 - 10.1039/d0ta06375d
DO - 10.1039/d0ta06375d
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85090955725
SN - 2050-7488
VL - 8
SP - 17487
EP - 17497
JO - Journal of Materials Chemistry A
JF - Journal of Materials Chemistry A
IS - 34
ER -