Kirkendall effect-induced uniform stress distribution stabilizes nickel-rich layered oxide cathodes

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

Ziyao Gao (Tsinghua University)

Chenglong Zhao (Tsinghua University)

Kai Zhou (Tsinghua University)

Junru Wu (Tsinghua University)

Yao Tian (Tsinghua University)

Xianming Deng (Tsinghua University)

Lihan Zhang (Tsinghua University)

Kui Lin (Tsinghua University)

Marnix Wagemaker (TU Delft - Applied Sciences)

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Research Group
RST/Storage of Electrochemical Energy
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45373-1 Final published version
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
RST/Storage of Electrochemical Energy
Issue number
1
Volume number
15
Article number
1503
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Abstract

Nickel-rich layered oxide cathodes promise ultrahigh energy density but is plagued by the mechanical failure of the secondary particle upon (de)lithiation. Existing approaches for alleviating the structural degradation could retard pulverization, yet fail to tune the stress distribution and root out the formation of cracks. Herein, we report a unique strategy to uniformize the stress distribution in secondary particle via Kirkendall effect to stabilize the core region during electrochemical cycling. Exotic metal/metalloid oxides (such as Al2O3 or SiO2) is introduced as the heterogeneous nucleation seeds for the preferential growth of the precursor. The calcination treatment afterwards generates a dopant-rich interior structure with central Kirkendall void, due to the different diffusivity between the exotic element and nickel atom. The resulting cathode material exhibits superior structural and electrochemical reversibility, thus contributing to a high specific energy density (based on cathode) of 660 Wh kg−1 after 500 cycles with a retention rate of 86%. This study suggests that uniformizing stress distribution represents a promising pathway to tackle the structural instability facing nickel-rich layered oxide cathodes.