Understanding the Irreversible Reaction Pathway of the Sacrificial Cathode Additive Li<sub>6</sub>CoO<sub>4</sub>
Article 2023 en
Authors
KJ
KyuJung Jun
LK
Lori A. Kaufman
WJ
Wangmo Jung
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract The use of a sacrificial cathode additive that contains a large amount of lithium is one potential solution to compensate for the irreversible capacity loss associated with next‐generation anodes such as silicon. Antifluorite‐type Li 6 CoO 4 has attracted attention as a potential cathode additive owing to its remarkably high theoretical lithium extraction capacity. However, the complex mechanism of lithium extraction as well as the oxygen loss from Li 6 CoO 4 is not well understood. A generalizable computational thermodynamics and experimental framework is presented to understand the lithium‐extraction pathway of Li 6 CoO 4 . It is found that one lithium per formula unit can be topotactically extracted from Li 6 CoO 4 , followed by an irreversible and nontopotactic phase transformation to Li 2 CoO 3 or LiCoO 2 depending on the temperature. The results show that peroxide species may form to charge‐compensate for Li extraction which is undesirable as this can lead to gas release during battery operation. It is suggested that charging Li 6 CoO 4 at an elevated temperature that the electrolyte can withstand, redirects the reaction pathway and prevents the formation of intermediate peroxide species making it an effective and stable sacrificial cathode additive.
Haegyeom Kim, KyuJung Jun, Nathan J Szymanski, Venkata Sai Avvaru, Zijian Cai, Matthew J. Crafton, Gi‐Hyeok Lee, Stephen E. Trask, Finn Babbe, Young‐Woon Byeon, Peichen Zhong, Donghun Lee, Byungchun Park, Wangmo Jung, Bryan D. McCloskey, Wanli Yang
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