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Understanding the Low-Voltage Hysteresis of Anionic Redox in Na2Mn3O7

Publication ,  Journal Article
Song, B; Tang, M; Hu, E; Borkiewicz, OJ; Wiaderek, KM; Zhang, Y; Phillip, ND; Liu, X; Shadike, Z; Li, C; Song, L; Hu, YY; Chi, M; Veith, GM ...
Published in: Chemistry of Materials
May 28, 2019

The large-voltage hysteresis remains one of the biggest barriers to optimizing Li/Na-ion cathodes using lattice anionic redox reaction, despite their very high energy density and relative low cost. Very recently, a layered sodium cathode Na2Mn3O7 (or Na4/7Mn6/7□1/7O2, □ is vacancy) was reported to have reversible lattice oxygen redox with much suppressed voltage hysteresis. However, the structural and electronic structural origin of this small-voltage hysteresis has not been well understood. In this article, through systematic studies using ex situ/in situ electron paramagnetic resonance and X-ray diffraction, we demonstrate that the exceptional small-voltage hysteresis (<50 mV) between charge and discharge curves is rooted in the well-maintained oxygen stacking sequence in the absence of irreversible gliding of oxygen layers and cation migration from the transition-metal layers. In addition, we further identify that the 4.2 V charge/discharge plateau is associated with a zero-strain (de)intercalation process of Na+ ions from distorted octahedral sites, while the 4.5 V plateau is linked to a reversible shrink/expansion process of the manganese-site vacancy during (de)intercalation of Na+ ions at distorted prismatic sites. It is expected that these findings will inspire further exploration of new cathode materials that can achieve both high energy density and efficiency by using lattice anionic redox.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Chemistry of Materials

DOI

EISSN

1520-5002

ISSN

0897-4756

Publication Date

May 28, 2019

Volume

31

Issue

10

Start / End Page

3756 / 3765

Related Subject Headings

  • Materials
  • 40 Engineering
  • 34 Chemical sciences
  • 09 Engineering
  • 03 Chemical Sciences
 

Citation

APA
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Song, B., Tang, M., Hu, E., Borkiewicz, O. J., Wiaderek, K. M., Zhang, Y., … Huq, A. (2019). Understanding the Low-Voltage Hysteresis of Anionic Redox in Na2Mn3O7. Chemistry of Materials, 31(10), 3756–3765. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b00772
Song, B., M. Tang, E. Hu, O. J. Borkiewicz, K. M. Wiaderek, Y. Zhang, N. D. Phillip, et al. “Understanding the Low-Voltage Hysteresis of Anionic Redox in Na2Mn3O7.” Chemistry of Materials 31, no. 10 (May 28, 2019): 3756–65. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b00772.
Song B, Tang M, Hu E, Borkiewicz OJ, Wiaderek KM, Zhang Y, et al. Understanding the Low-Voltage Hysteresis of Anionic Redox in Na2Mn3O7. Chemistry of Materials. 2019 May 28;31(10):3756–65.
Song, B., et al. “Understanding the Low-Voltage Hysteresis of Anionic Redox in Na2Mn3O7.” Chemistry of Materials, vol. 31, no. 10, May 2019, pp. 3756–65. Scopus, doi:10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b00772.
Song B, Tang M, Hu E, Borkiewicz OJ, Wiaderek KM, Zhang Y, Phillip ND, Liu X, Shadike Z, Li C, Song L, Hu YY, Chi M, Veith GM, Yang XQ, Liu J, Nanda J, Page K, Huq A. Understanding the Low-Voltage Hysteresis of Anionic Redox in Na2Mn3O7. Chemistry of Materials. 2019 May 28;31(10):3756–3765.
Journal cover image

Published In

Chemistry of Materials

DOI

EISSN

1520-5002

ISSN

0897-4756

Publication Date

May 28, 2019

Volume

31

Issue

10

Start / End Page

3756 / 3765

Related Subject Headings

  • Materials
  • 40 Engineering
  • 34 Chemical sciences
  • 09 Engineering
  • 03 Chemical Sciences