High‐Nickel Heterostructured Cathodes with Local Stoichiometry Control for High‐Voltage Operation

Author:

Yin Chong12,Ge Mingyuan1,Chung Youngmin3,Bai Jianming1,Lee Wah-Keat1,Kisslinger Kim1,Ehrlich Steven N.1,Xiao Xianghui1,Qiu Bao2,Trask Stephen E.4,Dunlop Alison R.4,Jansen Andrew N.4,Liu Zhaoping2,Shin Youngho3,Wang Feng15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Energy and Photon Sciences Directorate Brookhaven National Laboratory Upton NY 11973 USA

2. Ningbo Institute of Materials Technology and Engineering Chinese Academy of Sciences Ningbo 315201 P. R. China

3. Materials Engineering Research Facility Applied Materials Division Argonne National Laboratory Lemont IL 60439 USA

4. Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division Argonne National Laboratory Lemont IL 60439 USA

5. Applied Materials Division Argonne National Laboratory Lemont IL 60439 USA

Abstract

The growing demand for lithium‐ion batteries to power electric vehicles and other energy‐dense devices continues to fuel the need for cathodes of increasingly higher nickel in cathodes. The relentless pursuit of high Ni content, however, raises concerns on compromising cell lifetime and safety, especially under high‐voltage operation. Alternative to the traditional design of uniform or core–shell composition, we report a rational control of local stoichiometry in high‐Ni cathodes, enabling their high thermal and cycling stabilities—up to 258 °C at the fully charged state and 91.4% capacity retention for 100 cycles between 2.7 and 4.4 V. Multimodal synchrotron X‐ray characterization unveils the heterostructure of secondary particles, featuring a high‐Ni core (LiNi0.90Mn0.05Co0.05O2) covered by a thin Ni‐gradient layer that remains stable over prolonged cycling due to suppressed oxygen release and structural deterioration. This work underlines, the intricate interplay between local stoichiometry and redox reactions in stabilizing high‐Ni cathodes for high‐voltage operation while ensuring safety.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

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