Ultrahigh-Voltage LiCoO2 at 4.7 V by Interface Stabilization and Band Structure Modification

Adv Mater. 2023 Jun;35(22):e2212059. doi: 10.1002/adma.202212059. Epub 2023 Apr 14.

Abstract

Lithium cobalt oxide (LCO) is widely used in Li-ion batteries due to its high volumetric energy density, which is generally charged to 4.3 V. Lifting the cut-off voltage of LCO from 4.3 V to 4.7 V will increase the specific capacity from 150 to 230 mAh g-1 with a significant improvement of 53%. However, LCO suffers serious problems of H1-3/O1 phase transformation, unstable interface between cathode and electrolyte, and irreversible oxygen redox reaction at 4.7 V. Herein, interface stabilization and band structure modification are proposed to strengthen the crystal structure of LCO for stable cycling of LCO at an ultrahigh voltage of 4.7 V. Gradient distribution of magnesium and uniform doping of nickel in Li layers inhibit the harmful phase transitions of LCO, while uniform LiMgx Ni1- x PO4 coating stabilizes the LCO-electrolyte interface during cycles. Moreover, the modified band structure improves the oxygen redox reaction reversibility and electrochemical performance of the modified LCO. As a result, the modified LCO has a high capacity retention of 78% after 200 cycles at 4.7 V in the half cell and 63% after 500 cycles at 4.6 V in the full cell. This work makes the capacity of LCO one step closer to its theoretical specific capacity.

Keywords: band structure; element doping; high-voltage LiCoO 2; interface stabilization; phase transition.