November 10, 2017
Journal Article

Formation of an Anti-core-shell Structure in Layered Oxide Cathode for Li-ion Batteries

Abstract

The layered ? rock-salt phase transformation in the layered dioxide cathodes for Li-ion batteries is believed to result in a “core-shell” structure of the primary particles, in which the core region maintains as the layered phase while the surface region undergoes the phase transformation to the rock-salt phase. Using transmission electron microscopy, here we demonstrate the formation of an “anti-core-shell” structure in cycled primary particles with a formula of LiNi0.80Co0.15Al0.05O2, in which the surface and subsurface regions remain as the layered structure while the rock-salt phase forms as domains in the bulk with a thin layer of the spinel phase between the rock-salt core and the skin of the layered phase. Formation of this anti-core-shell structure is attributed to the oxygen loss at the surface that drives the migration of oxygen from the bulk to the surface, thereby resulting in localized areas of significantly reduced oxygen levels in the bulk of the particle, which subsequently undergoes the phase transformation to the rock-salt domains. The formation of the anti-core-shell rock-salt domains is responsible for the reduced capacity, discharge voltage and ionic conductivity in cycled cathode.

Revised: June 23, 2020 | Published: November 10, 2017

Citation

Zhang H., F. Omenya, M.S. Whittingham, C. Wang, and G. Zhou. 2017. Formation of an Anti-core-shell Structure in Layered Oxide Cathode for Li-ion Batteries. ACS Energy Letters 2, no. 11:2598-2606. PNNL-SA-130068. doi:10.1021/acsenergylett.7b00921