High-capacity full lithium-ion cells based on nanoarchitectured ternary manganese-nickel-cobalt carbonate and its lithiated derivative

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-28-2014

Abstract

A full lithium-ion battery cell has been assembled based on nanoarchitectured ternary manganese-nickel-cobalt compounds, in which multi-shell spherical Mn0.54Ni0.13Co 0.13(CO3)0.8 serves as the anode and the subsequently lithiated Li-excess Li[Li0.2Mn0.54Ni 0.13Co0.13]O2 with a yolk-shell structure acts as the cathode. The performance of a lithium-ion full battery significantly relies on the electrochemical properties of both anode and cathode materials. A multi-shell carbonate anode is first tested in a half battery cell with metallic lithium as the counter electrode, revealing an unexpectedly high initial charge capacity of 1173.1 mA h g-1 at a specific current of 25 mA g -1, which is two times higher than its theoretical capacity. Moreover, when cycled at 250 mA g-1 for 100 electrochemical cycles, this carbonate anode retains a final specific capacity of 434.6 mA h g -1. Accordingly, a yolk-shell-structured Li-excess layered cathode material has been facilely obtained through lithiation of carbonate compounds, showing an initial discharge capacity of 250.7 mA h g-1 when cycled at 0.1 C (1 C = 250 mA g-1) in a half battery cell. Furthermore, this cathode retains a final capacity of 156.3 mA h g-1 at 1 C after 100 cycles and exhibits an outstanding capacity retention of 90.3%. Such remarkable electrochemical properties of carbonate anode and Li-excess oxide cathode materials are attributed to their nanoarchitectures resulting from the water-based solvothermal process, i.e., multi-shell and yolk-shell structures composed of numerous primary nanoparticles, in comparison with mediocre performances from monodispersive carbonate microspheres and Li-excess oxide nanoparticles synthesized via an ethylene-glycol-based solvothermal method. Combination of the nanostructured ternary transition metal carbonate anode and the Li-excess layered cathode into a full lithium-ion battery results in a remarkable specific capacity above 250 mA h g-1 at 0.1 C in the voltage range of 0.1-4.0 V, which demonstrates the application as a very promising electrochemical device for future energy conversion and storage. © the Partner Organisations 2014.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

First Page

14947

Last Page

14956

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