학술논문

Protonation Stimulates the Layered to Rock Salt Phase Transition of Ni‐Rich Sodium Cathodes
Document Type
article
Source
Advanced Materials. 36(13)
Subject
Engineering
Materials Engineering
Chemical Sciences
Physical Chemistry
layered cathode materials
protonation
rock-salt phase
sodium-ion batteries
rock‐salt phase
sodium‐ion batteries
Physical Sciences
Nanoscience & Nanotechnology
Chemical sciences
Physical sciences
Language
Abstract
Protonation of oxide cathodes triggers surface transition metal dissolution and accelerates the performance degradation of Li-ion batteries. While strategies are developed to improve cathode material surface stability, little is known about the effects of protonation on bulk phase transitions in these cathode materials or their sodium-ion battery counterparts. Here, using NaNiO2 in electrolytes with different proton-generating levels as model systems, a holistic picture of the effect of incorporated protons is presented. Protonation of lattice oxygens stimulate transition metal migration to the alkaline layer and accelerates layered-rock-salt phase transition, which leads to bulk structure disintegration and anisotropic surface reconstruction layers formation. A cathode that undergoes severe protonation reactions attains a porous architecture corresponding to its multifold performance fade. This work reveals that interactions between electrolyte and cathode that result in protonation can dominate the structural reversibility/stability of bulk cathodes, and the insight sheds light for the development of future batteries.