Origin of stabilization and destabilization in solid-state redox reaction of oxide ions for lithium-ion batteries

Naoaki Yabuuchi(Tokyo Denki University), Masanobu Nakayama(Nagoya Institute of Technology), Mitsue Takeuchi(Tokyo University of Science), Shinichi Komaba(Tokyo University of Science), Yu Hashimoto(Nagoya Institute of Technology), Takahiro Mukai(Nagoya Institute of Technology), Hiromasa Shiiba(Nagoya Institute of Technology), Kei Sato(Tokyo Denki University), Y. Kobayashi(Tokyo Denki University), Aiko Nakao(RIKEN Advanced Science Institute), Masao Yonemura(High Energy Accelerator Research Organization), Keisuke Yamanaka(Ritsumeikan University), Kei Mitsuhara(Ritsumeikan University), Toshiaki Ohta(Ritsumeikan University)
Nature Communications
December 23, 2016
Cited by 448Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Further increase in energy density of lithium batteries is needed for zero emission vehicles. However, energy density is restricted by unavoidable theoretical limits for positive electrodes used in commercial applications. One possibility towards energy densities exceeding these limits is to utilize anion (oxide ion) redox, instead of classical transition metal redox. Nevertheless, origin of activation of the oxide ion and its stabilization mechanism are not fully understood. Here we demonstrate that the suppression of formation of superoxide-like species on lithium extraction results in reversible redox for oxide ions, which is stabilized by the presence of relatively less covalent character of Mn 4+ with oxide ions without the sacrifice of electronic conductivity. On the basis of these findings, we report an electrode material, whose metallic constituents consist only of 3 d transition metal elements. The material delivers a reversible capacity of 300 mAh g −1 based on solid-state redox reaction of oxide ions.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis