On the Active Components in Crystalline Li-Nb-O and Li-Ta-O Coatings from First Principles (2306.10716v1)
Abstract: Layered-oxide $\mathrm{LiNi_xMn_yCo_{1-x-y}O_2}$ (NMC) positive electrodes with high Nickel content, deliver high voltages and energy densities. However, a high nickel content, e.g., $x$ = 0.8 (NMC 811), can lead to high surface reactivity, which can trigger thermal runaway and gas generation. While claimed safer, all-solid-state batteries still suffer from high interfacial resistance. Here, we investigate niobate and tantalate coating materials, which can mitigate the interfacial reactivities in Li-ion and all-solid-state batteries. First-principles calculations reveal the multiphasic nature of Li-Nb-O and Li-Ta-O coatings, containing mixtures of $\mathrm{LiNbO_3}$ and $\mathrm{Li_3NbO_4}$, or of $\mathrm{LiTaO_3}$ and $\mathrm{Li_3TaO_4}$. The concurrence of several phases in Li-Nb-O or Li-Ta-O modulates the type of stable native defects in these coatings. Li-Nb-O and Li-Ta-O coating materials can form favorably lithium vacancies $\mathrm{Vac{'}_{Li}}$ and antisite defects $\mathrm{Nb{\bullet \bullet \bullet \bullet}{Li}}$ ($\mathrm{Ta{\bullet \bullet \bullet \bullet}{Li}}$) combined into charge-neutral defect complexes. Even in defective crystalline $\mathrm{LiNbO_3}$ (or $\mathrm{LiTaO_3}$), we reveal poor Li-ion conduction properties. In contrast, $\mathrm{Li_3NbO_4}$ and $\mathrm{Li_3TaO_4}$ that are introduced by high-temperature calcinations can provide adequate Li-ion transport in these coatings. Our in-depth investigation of the structure-property relationships in the important Li-Nb-O and Li-Ta-O coating materials helps to develop more suitable calcination protocols to maximize the functional properties of these niobates and tantalates.
Sponsor
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.