Lithium ion manganese oxide battery
A lithium ion manganese oxide battery is a lithium-ion cell that uses manganese dioxide, as the cathode material. They function through the same intercalation/de-intercalation mechanism as other commercialized secondary battery technologies, such as lithium cobalt oxide. Cathodes based on manganese-oxide components are earth-abundant, inexpensive, non-toxic, and provide better thermal stability.
Compounds
Spinel
Structure
One of the more studied manganese oxide-based cathodes is, a cation ordered member of the spinel structural family. In addition to containing inexpensive materials, the three-dimensional structure of lends itself to high rate capability by providing a well connected framework for the insertion and de-insertion of ions during discharge and charge of the battery. In particular, the ions occupy the tetrahedral sites within the polyhedral frameworks adjacent to empty octahedral sites. As a consequence of this structural arrangement, batteries based on cathodes have demonstrated a higher rate-capability compared to materials with two-dimensional frameworks for diffusion.LiMn2O4→Li1−xMn2O4+xLi++xe−
Electrochemical performance
Challenges of LiMn2O4 under high voltage
The voltage, capacity, and current density that are practically reached in real batteries are significantly impacted by the contact potential and kinetic effects. Kinetic variables, which frequently arise at the contact and continuously change over time as a result of degradation events, thus govern the electrochemical performance. Critical issues are presented by these events, especially with regard to high voltage stability.Surface distortions
Applying a high voltage to a spinel-structured cathode may induce partial spinel-to-layered transformation on the surface region. The distortion of the surface structure can be extended to the bulk level.Since layered structures and spinel share an oxygen sub-lattice of the cubic close-packed structure, the evolution of layered structure from spinel only necessitates the migration of Mn from 16d octahedral interstices to another, passing through the tetrahedral interim site without the need for oxygen reordering.
Face-sharing cations have a strong repulsion and a little separation, making this an adverse energy process that is unlikely to occur unless another event facilitates it. Mn can only migrate across these tetrahedral interstices if a tiny quantity of oxygen is removed.
Mn4+ ions are reduced to Mn3+ ions or even lower as a result of oxygen non-stoichiometry because of the required charge adjustment. Mn3+ and Mn4+ ions are dispersed throughout half of the octahedral site in LiMn2O4. In the spinel structure, the Mn3+ ions have demonstrated a predilection for tetrahedral 8a sites with high mobility.
Interfacial reactions between cathode and electrolyte
Because of their strong nucleophilic and Lewis's base characteristics, cathode materials can interact with oxygen atoms in the electrolyte to cause redox reactions. The electrolyte will be reduced on the anode surface and oxidized on the cathode surface once the electrode potential exceeds the typical electrolyte stability window. This will result in the formation of solid electrolyte interphase and cathode-electrolyte interface layers, respectively. By passivating the electrode and blocking electron transport, the CEI layer would stabilize the electrode and electrolyte.It is commonly known that oxygen is necessary for the formation of the CEI layer and electrolyte breakdown. At high voltage, the electrolytes containing LiPF6 salts become unstable. They can create a highly concentrated acidic species when they combine with a small amount of water, which acts as an oxygen source. By causing a disproportionate reaction, the HF damages the electrode materials' surface, which is the main reason why Mn dissolves. The dissolved Mn2+ may either settle on the anode surface and spontaneously reduce to metallic Mn, or it could mix with F− to create MnF2.
Stress-Induced cracking
Stress is produced in the LiB system by the anisotropic lattice expansion and contraction along with the repetitive Li-insertion and extraction. Stress can cause cracking, which can start at the grain boundaries and spread until the particles are completely ground up.LiMn2O4 cathode materials suffer ca. 8% lattice volume expansion and contraction for each charge and discharge cycle between LiMn2O4 and λ-MnO2.
The orientation of Mn–O bonding sublattices regulates the production of LiMn2O4 cracks, according to the first principles-based study. Because of Mn oxidation and the lower radius of Mn4+ ions compared to Mn3+ ions, the delithiation state of LiMn2O4 encourages strain-driven Mn–O bond compression. These surface bonds are unable to completely shorten to the equilibrium bond lengths due to the fixed lattice parameters of the LiMn2O4 host structure. Tensile surface tension is thus the result of these conflicting pressures acting on the near-surface Mn–O bond. The production of surface cracks that spread into bulk LiMn2O4 may be initiated by these high tensile surface stresses.
Strategies for high voltage stabilization
Doping
A workable method to prevent Jahn-Teller distortion, stabilize the crystal lattice, and improve LiMn2O4's electrochemical performance is to dope or partially substitute pure LiMn2O4 with other elements. A number of doping elements, including Al, Ni, Fe, Mg, Si, and B, have been shown to be effective.For instance, the Al3+ occupation in sites 8a and 16d prevented Mn2+ ions from moving to dissolve in the electrolyte and reduced the likelihood of Mn disproportion. Modification of Al3+ ions also decreased the electrolyte breakdown products that were deposited on LiMn2O4's surface. The surface may be significantly shielded from HF assaults by the Al3+ ions.
Surface coating
It is a controllable and effective way of preserving the CEI layer and reducing the side reactions. The presence of the metal oxide coatings can minimize the direct contact area of the LiMn2O4/electrolyte interface and suppress the dissolution of Mn3+ ions.The coating materials comprise principally various metal fluoride, metal oxide, carbon, lithium-ion conductor, and polymer. Among them, TiO2 was claimed to have channels that could be utilized to store small Li+. Spinel LiMn2O4 surface modification may further limit Mn dissolution over cycles and postpone electrode-electrolyte side reactions.