Q. Wang
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Next-generation rechargeable batteries require materials that offer enhanced electrochemical capabilities. Achieving these goals depends on understanding the fundamental principles governing these materials, which presents challenges associated to the complex interactions between composition, structural characteristics and electrochemical performance in battery materials. Despite intensive research, progress remains limited regarding effective strategies to mitigate the degradation of fragile alkali-metal-deficient frameworks arising from lattice stress and structural or chemo-mechanical instability upon cycling. In this Review, we explore the importance of chemical heterogeneity in rechargeable battery materials. We discuss how heterogeneity at atomic scale, nano-domains and up to phase-segregated levels within particles can enhance the electrochemical properties of battery materials beyond those of their homogeneous counterparts. Introducing chemical heterogeneity, principles and mechanisms can be unlocked to develop materials with improved structural stability, ion conductivity, redox activity, and phase transition characteristics, driving progress in battery technology. Finally, we outline the challenges and strategies for developing the future battery materials. (Figure presented.)
All-solid-state batteries receive ample attention due to their promising safety characteristics and energy density. The latter holds true if they are compatible with next-generation high-capacity anodes, but most highly ion-conductive solid electrolytes decompose at low operating potentials, leading to lithium loss and increased cell resistances. Here the dynamic stability of solid electrolytes that can improve all-solid-state battery performance is demonstrated. Halide electrolytes Li3YCl3Br3 and Li2ZrCl6, considered unstable at low potentials, are found to exhibit structurally reversible redox activity beyond their electrochemical stability windows, increasing compatibility with anodes and contributing to capacity without compromising ionic conductivity. The benefit of this dynamic stability window is demonstrated with cost-effective red phosphorus anodes, resulting in high reversible capacities (2,308 mAh g−1), high rate capacity retention (1,024 mAh g−1 at 7.75 mA cm−2) and extended cycle life (61% retention after 1,780 cycles). Furthermore, high areal capacity (7.65 mAh cm−2) and stability (70% retention after 1,000 cycles) are achieved for halide-based full cells with red phosphorous anodes. The beneficial redox activity of halide electrolytes greatly expands their application scenarios and suggests valuable battery design principles to enhance performance.
Layered transition metal (TM) compounds are pivotal in the development of rechargeable battery technologies for efficient energy storage. The history of these materials dates back to the 1970s, when the concept of intercalation chemistry was introduced into the battery. This process involves the insertion of alkali-metal ions between the layers of a host material (e.g., TiS2) without causing significant structural disruption. This breakthrough laid the foundation for Li-ion batteries, with materials like LiCoO2 becoming key to their commercial success, thanks to their high energy density and good stability. However, despite these advantages, challenges remain in the broader application of these materials in batteries. Issues such as lattice strain, cation migration, and structural collapse result in rapid capacity degradation and a reduction in battery lifespan. Moreover, the performance of batteries is often constrained by the properties of the available materials, particularly in layered oxide materials. This has driven the exploration of materials with diverse compositions. The relationship between composition and structural chemistry is crucial for determining reversible capacity, redox activity, and phase transitions, yet predicting this remains a significant challenge, especially for complex compositions.
In this Account, we outline our efforts to explore rational principles for optimal battery materials that offer a higher performance. The core of this is the concept of ionic potential, a parameter that measures the strength of the electrostatic interaction between ions. It is defined as the ratio of an ion’s charge to its ionic radius, offering a quantitative way to evaluate interactions between cations and anions in crystal structures. By building on this concept, we introduce the cationic potential, which is emerging as a crystallographic tool that captures critical interactions within layered oxide materials. This approach provides insights into structural organization, enabling the prediction of P2- and O3-type stacking arrangements in layered oxides. A key advantage of using the cationic potential is its ability to guide the rational design of electrode materials with improved performance. For example, introducing P-type structural motifs into the material framework can significantly enhance ion mobility, mitigating detrimental phase transitions that often compromise battery efficiency and longevity. Furthermore, ionic potential serves as a representative parameter to quantitatively describe the properties of various TM compositions, providing a straightforward calculation method for designing multielement systems. We anticipate that this Account will provide fundamental insights and contribute to significant advancements in the design of layered materials, not only for battery applications but also for broader fields that require control of the material properties. ...
Layered transition metal (TM) compounds are pivotal in the development of rechargeable battery technologies for efficient energy storage. The history of these materials dates back to the 1970s, when the concept of intercalation chemistry was introduced into the battery. This process involves the insertion of alkali-metal ions between the layers of a host material (e.g., TiS2) without causing significant structural disruption. This breakthrough laid the foundation for Li-ion batteries, with materials like LiCoO2 becoming key to their commercial success, thanks to their high energy density and good stability. However, despite these advantages, challenges remain in the broader application of these materials in batteries. Issues such as lattice strain, cation migration, and structural collapse result in rapid capacity degradation and a reduction in battery lifespan. Moreover, the performance of batteries is often constrained by the properties of the available materials, particularly in layered oxide materials. This has driven the exploration of materials with diverse compositions. The relationship between composition and structural chemistry is crucial for determining reversible capacity, redox activity, and phase transitions, yet predicting this remains a significant challenge, especially for complex compositions.
In this Account, we outline our efforts to explore rational principles for optimal battery materials that offer a higher performance. The core of this is the concept of ionic potential, a parameter that measures the strength of the electrostatic interaction between ions. It is defined as the ratio of an ion’s charge to its ionic radius, offering a quantitative way to evaluate interactions between cations and anions in crystal structures. By building on this concept, we introduce the cationic potential, which is emerging as a crystallographic tool that captures critical interactions within layered oxide materials. This approach provides insights into structural organization, enabling the prediction of P2- and O3-type stacking arrangements in layered oxides. A key advantage of using the cationic potential is its ability to guide the rational design of electrode materials with improved performance. For example, introducing P-type structural motifs into the material framework can significantly enhance ion mobility, mitigating detrimental phase transitions that often compromise battery efficiency and longevity. Furthermore, ionic potential serves as a representative parameter to quantitatively describe the properties of various TM compositions, providing a straightforward calculation method for designing multielement systems. We anticipate that this Account will provide fundamental insights and contribute to significant advancements in the design of layered materials, not only for battery applications but also for broader fields that require control of the material properties.
One of the primary challenges to improving lithium-ion batteries lies in comprehending and controlling the intricate interphases. However, the complexity of interface reactions and the buried nature make it difficult to establish the relationship between the interphase characteristics and electrolyte chemistry. Herein, we employ diverse characterization techniques to investigate the progression of electrode-electrolyte interphases, bringing forward opportunities to improve the interphase properties by what we refer to as high-entropy solvation disordered electrolytes. Through formulating an electrolyte with a regular 1.0 M concentration that includes multiple commercial lithium salts, the solvation interaction with lithium ions alters fundamentally. The participation of several salts can result in a weaker solvation interaction, giving rise to an anion-rich and disordered solvation sheath despite the low salt concentration. This induces a conformal, inorganic-rich interphase that effectively passivates electrodes, preventing solvent co-intercalation. Remarkably, this electrolyte significantly enhances the performance of graphite-containing anodes paired with high-capacity cathodes, offering a promising avenue for tailoring interphase chemistries.
The formation of stable interphases on the electrodes is crucial for rechargeable lithium (Li) batteries. However, next-generation high-energy batteries face challenges in controlling interphase formation due to the high reactivity and structural changes of electrodes, leading to reduced stability and slow ion transport, which accelerate battery degradation. Here, we report an approach to address these issues by introducing multicomponent grain-boundary-rich interphase that boosts the rapid transport of ions and enhances passivation toward prolonged lifespan. This is guided by fundamental principles of solid-state ionics and geological crystallization differentiation theory, achieved through improved solvation chemistry. Demonstrations showcase how the introduction of the interphase substantially impacts the Li-ion transport across the interphase and the electrode-electrolyte compatibility in cost-effective electrolyte solutions optimized with multiple Li salts. The resulting interphases feature microstructures rich in inorganic grain boundaries with a diverse array of nanosized grains, presenting enhanced Li-ion transport. Comprehensive analyses revealed that this realizes remarkable electrochemical stability over extended cycling periods by inhibiting electrode corrosion, thus holding promise for high-capacity thin-Li-metal, Si-based anodes, and even Li-free anodes when paired with high-capacity oxide cathodes. This work opens new avenues to customize protective interphases on high-capacity electrodes, promoting the development of batteries with the highest energy density using cost-effective electrolytes.
All-solid-state lithium batteries have attracted widespread attention for next-generation energy storage, potentially providing enhanced safety and cycling stability. The performance of such batteries relies on solid electrolyte materials; hence many structures/phases are being investigated with increasing compositional complexity. Among the various solid electrolytes, lithium halides show promising ionic conductivity and cathode compatibility, however, there are no effective guidelines when moving toward complex compositions that go beyond ab-initio modeling. Here, we show that ionic potential, the ratio of charge number and ion radius, can effectively capture the key interactions within halide materials, making it possible to guide the design of the representative crystal structures. This is demonstrated by the preparation of a family of complex layered halides that combine an enhanced conductivity with a favorable isometric morphology, induced by the high configurational entropy. This work provides insights into the characteristics of complex halide phases and presents a methodology for designing solid materials.
Ordered layered structures serve as essential components in lithium (Li)-ion cathodes1–3. However, on charging, the inherently delicate Li-deficient frameworks become vulnerable to lattice strain and structural and/or chemo-mechanical degradation, resulting in rapid capacity deterioration and thus short battery life2,4. Here we report an approach that addresses these issues using the integration of chemical short-range disorder (CSRD) into oxide cathodes, which involves the localized distribution of elements in a crystalline lattice over spatial dimensions, spanning a few nearest-neighbour spacings. This is guided by fundamental principles of structural chemistry and achieved through an improved ceramic synthesis process. To demonstrate its viability, we showcase how the introduction of CSRD substantially affects the crystal structure of layered Li cobalt oxide cathodes. This is manifested in the transition metal environment and its interactions with oxygen, effectively preventing detrimental sliding of crystal slabs and structural deterioration during Li removal. Meanwhile, it affects the electronic structure, leading to improved electronic conductivity. These attributes are highly beneficial for Li-ion storage capabilities, markedly improving cycle life and rate capability. Moreover, we find that CSRD can be introduced in additional layered oxide materials through improved chemical co-doping, further illustrating its potential to enhance structural and electrochemical stability. These findings open up new avenues for the design of oxide cathodes, offering insights into the effects of CSRD on the crystal and electronic structure of advanced functional materials.
Sodium-ion batteries have not only garnered substantial attention for grid-scale energy storage owing to the higher abundance of sodium compared with lithium, but also present the possibility of fast charging because of the inherently higher sodium-ion mobility. However, it remains a phenomenal challenge to achieve a combination of these merits, given the complex structural chemistry of sodium-ion oxide materials. Here we show that O3-type sodium-ion layered cathodes (for example, Na5/6Li2/27Ni8/27Mn11/27Ti6/27O2) have the potential to attain high power density, high energy density (260 Wh kg−1 at the electrode level) and long cycle life (capacity retention of 80% over 700 cycles in full cells). The design involves introduction of characteristic P3-structural motifs into an O3-type framework that serves to promote sodium-ion diffusivity and address detrimental transition metal migration and phase transition at a high state of charge. This study provides a principle for the rational design of sodium-ion layered oxide electrodes and advances the understanding of the composition–structure–property relationships of oxide cathode materials.
Developing liquid electrolytes with higher kinetics and enhanced interphase stability is one of the key challenges for lithium batteries. However, the poor solubility of lithium salts in solvents sets constraints that compromises the electrolyte properties. Here, it is shown that introducing multiple salts to form a high-entropy solution, alters the solvation structure, which can be used to raise the solubility of specific salts and stabilize electrode–electrolyte interphases. The prepared high-entropy electrolytes significantly enhance the cycling and rate performance of lithium batteries. For lithium-metal anodes the reversibility exceeds 99%, which extends the cycle life of batteries even under aggressive cycling conditions. For commercial batteries, combining a graphite anode with a LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 cathode, more than 1000 charge–discharge cycles are achieved while maintaining a capacity retention of more than 90%. These performance improvements with respect to regular electrolytes are rationalized by the unique features of the solvation structure in high-entropy electrolytes. The weaker solvation interaction induced by the higher disorder results in improved lithium-ion kinetics, and the altered solvation composition leads to stabilized interphases. Finally, the high-entropy, induced by the presence of multiple salts, enables a decrease in melting temperature of the electrolytes and thus enables lower battery operation temperatures without changing the solvents.
High-entropy alloys/compounds have large configurational entropy by introducing multiple components, showing improved functional properties that exceed those of conventional materials. However, how increasing entropy impacts the thermodynamic/kinetic properties in liquids that are ambiguous. Here we show this strategy in liquid electrolytes for rechargeable lithium batteries, demonstrating the substantial impact of raising the entropy of electrolytes by introducing multiple salts. Unlike all liquid electrolytes so far reported, the participation of several anionic groups in this electrolyte induces a larger diversity in solvation structures, unexpectedly decreasing solvation strengths between lithium ions and solvents/anions, facilitating lithium-ion diffusivity and the formation of stable interphase passivation layers. In comparison to the single-salt electrolytes, a low-concentration dimethyl ether electrolyte with four salts shows an enhanced cycling stability and rate capability. These findings, rationalized by the fundamental relationship between entropy-dominated solvation structures and ion transport, bring forward high-entropy electrolytes as a composition-rich and unexplored space for lithium batteries and beyond.
Improving the reversibility of lithium metal batteries is one of the challenges in current battery research. This requires better fundamental understanding of the evolution of the lithium deposition morphology, which is very complex due to the various parameters involved in different systems. Here, we clarify the fundamental origins of lithium deposition coverage in achieving highly reversible and compact lithium deposits, providing a comprehensive picture in the relationship between the lithium microstructure and solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) for lithium metal batteries. Systematic variation of the salt concentration offers a framework that brings forward the different aspects that play a role in cycling reversibility. Higher nucleation densities are formed in lower concentration electrolytes, which have the advantage of higher lithium deposition coverage; however, it goes along with the formation of an organic-rich instable SEI which is unfavorable for the reversibility during (dis)charging. On the other hand, the growth of large deposits benefiting from the formation of an inorganic-rich stable SEI is observed in higher concentration electrolytes, but the initial small nucleation density prevents full coverage of the current collector, thus compromising the plated lithium metal density. Taking advantages of the paradox, a nanostructured substrate is rationally applied, which increases the nucleation density realizing a higher deposition coverage and thus more compact plating at intermediate concentration (∼1.0 M) electrolytes, leading to extended reversible cycling of batteries.
Layered Na-based oxides with the general composition of NaxTMO2 (TM: transition metal) have attracted significant attention for their high compositional diversity that provides tunable electrochemical performance for electrodes in sodium-ion batteries. The various compositions bring forward complex structural chemistry that is decisive for the layered stacking structure, Na-ion conductivity, and the redox activity, potentially promising new avenues in functional material properties. In this work, we have explored the maximum Na content in P2-type layered oxides and discovered that the high-content Na in the host enhances the structural stability; moreover, it promotes the oxidation of low-valent cations to their high oxidation states (in this case Ni2+). This can be rationalized by the increased hybridization of the O(2p)-TM(3d-eg*) states, affecting both the local TM environment as well as the interactions between the NaO2 and TMO2 layers. These properties are highly beneficial for the Na storage capabilities as required for cathode materials in sodium-ion batteries. It leads to excellent Na-ion mobility, a large storage capacity (>100 mAh g-1 between 2.0-4.0 V), yet preventing the detrimental sliding of the TMO2 layers (P2-O2 structural transition), as reflected by the ultralong cycle life (3000 (dis)charge cycles demonstrated). These findings expand the horizons of high Na-content P2-type materials, providing new insights of the electronic and structural chemistry for advanced cathode materials.
Sodium-ion batteries have captured widespread attention for grid-scale energy storage owing to the natural abundance of sodium. The performance of such batteries is limited by available electrode materials, especially for sodium-ion layered oxides, motivating the exploration of high compositional diversity. How the composition determines the structural chemistry is decisive for the electrochemical performance but very challenging to predict, especially for complex compositions. We introduce the "cationic potential" that captures the key interactions of layered materials and makes it possible to predict the stacking structures. This is demonstrated through the rational design and preparation of layered electrode materials with improved performance. As the stacking structure determines the functional properties, this methodology offers a solution toward the design of alkali metal layered oxides.
Metallic lithium is a promising anode to increase the energy density of rechargeable lithium batteries. Despite extensive efforts, detrimental reactivity of lithium metal with electrolytes and uncontrolled dendrite growth remain challenging interconnected issues hindering highly reversible Li-metal batteries. Herein, we report a rationally designed amide-based electrolyte based on the desired interface products. This amide electrolyte achieves a high average Coulombic efficiency during cycling, resulting in an outstanding capacity retention with a 3.5 mAh cm−2 high-mass-loaded LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 cathode. The interface reactions with the amide electrolyte lead to the predicted solid electrolyte interface species, having favorable properties such as high ionic conductivity and high stability. Operando monitoring the lithium spatial distribution reveals that the highly reversible behavior is related to denser deposition as well as top-down stripping, which decreases the formation of porous deposits and inactive lithium, providing new insights for the development of interface chemistries for metal batteries.