Lithium-free transition metal monoxides for positive electrodes in lithium-ion batteries

  • Sung Kyun Jung
  • , Hyunchul Kim
  • , Min Gee Cho
  • , Sung Pyo Cho
  • , Byungju Lee
  • , Hyungsub Kim
  • , Young Uk Park
  • , Jihyun Hong
  • , Kyu Young Park
  • , Gabin Yoon
  • , Won Mo Seong
  • , Yongbeom Cho
  • , Myoung Hwan Oh
  • , Haegyeom Kim
  • , Hyeokjo Gwon
  • , Insang Hwang
  • , Taeghwan Hyeon
  • , Won Sub Yoon
  • , Kisuk Kang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

113 Scopus citations

Abstract

Lithium-ion batteries based on intercalation compounds have dominated the advanced portable energy storage market. The positive electrode materials in these batteries belong to a material group of lithium-conducting crystals that contain redox-active transition metal and lithium. Materials without lithium-conducting paths or lithium-free compounds could be rarely used as positive electrodes due to the incapability of reversible lithium intercalation or the necessity of using metallic lithium as negative electrodes. These constraints have significantly limited the choice of materials and retarded the development of new positive electrodes in lithium-ion batteries. Here, we demonstrate that lithium-free transition metal monoxides that do not contain lithium-conducting paths in their crystal structure can be converted into high-capacity positive electrodes in the electrochemical cell by initially decorating the monoxide surface with nanosized lithium fluoride. This unusual electrochemical behaviour is attributed to a surface conversion reaction mechanism in contrast with the classic lithium intercalation reaction. Our findings will offer a potential new path in the design of positive electrode materials in lithium-ion batteries.

Original languageEnglish
Article number16208
JournalNature Energy
Volume2
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Jan 2017

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