» Articles » PMID: 21765400

Kinetics of Non-equilibrium Lithium Incorporation in LiFePO4

Overview
Journal Nat Mater
Date 2011 Jul 19
PMID 21765400
Citations 36
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Lithium-ion batteries are a key technology for multiple clean energy applications. Their energy and power density is largely determined by the cathode materials, which store Li by incorporation into their crystal structure. Most commercialized cathode materials, such as LiCoO(2) (ref. 1), LiMn(2)O(4) (ref. 2), Li(Ni,Co,Al)O(2) or Li(Ni,Co,Mn)O(2) (ref. 3), form solid solutions over a large concentration range, with occasional weak first-order transitions as a result of ordering of Li or electronic effects. An exception is LiFePO(4), which stores Li through a two-phase transformation between FePO(4) and LiFePO(4) (refs 5-8). Notwithstanding having to overcome extra kinetic barriers, such as nucleation of the second phase and growth through interface motion, the observed rate capability of LiFePO(4) has become remarkably high. In particular, once transport limitations at the electrode level are removed through carbon addition and particle size reduction, the innate rate capability of LiFePO(4) is revealed to be very high. We demonstrate that the reason LiFePO(4) functions as a cathode at reasonable rate is the availability of a single-phase transformation path at very low overpotential, allowing the system to bypass nucleation and growth of a second phase. The Li(x)FePO(4) system is an example where the kinetic transformation path between LiFePO(4) and FePO(4) is fundamentally different from the path deduced from its equilibrium phase diagram.

Citing Articles

Stepwise Structural Relaxation in Battery Active Materials.

Skurtveit A, North E, Park H, Chernyshov D, Wragg D, Koposov A ACS Mater Lett. 2025; 7(1):343-349.

PMID: 39790737 PMC: 11707793. DOI: 10.1021/acsmaterialslett.4c02058.


Grain Boundaries Control Lithiation of Solid Solution Substrates in Lithium Metal Batteries.

Aota L, Jung C, Zhang S, Buyukuslu O, Saksena A, Hatipoglu E Adv Sci (Weinh). 2024; 12(4):e2409275.

PMID: 39629970 PMC: 11789589. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202409275.


Origin of electrochemical voltage range and voltage profile of insertion electrodes.

Shahpouri E, Kalantarian M Sci Rep. 2024; 14(1):14311.

PMID: 38906926 PMC: 11192894. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-65230-x.


Identifying critical features of iron phosphate particle for lithium preference.

Yan G, Wei J, Apodaca E, Choi S, Eng P, Stubbs J Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):4859.

PMID: 38849339 PMC: 11161493. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-49191-3.


Averting H-Mediated Charge Storage Chemistry Stabilizes the High Output Voltage of LiMnO-Based Aqueous Battery.

Bhadra A, Swathilakshmi S, Mittal U, Sharma N, Sai Gautam G, Kundu D Small Methods. 2024; 8(12):e2400070.

PMID: 38639028 PMC: 11671848. DOI: 10.1002/smtd.202400070.


References
1.
Gu L, Zhu C, Li H, Yu Y, Li C, Tsukimoto S . Direct observation of lithium staging in partially delithiated LiFePO4 at atomic resolution. J Am Chem Soc. 2011; 133(13):4661-3. DOI: 10.1021/ja109412x. View

2.
Dreyer W, Jamnik J, Guhlke C, Huth R, Moskon J, Gaberscek M . The thermodynamic origin of hysteresis in insertion batteries. Nat Mater. 2010; 9(5):448-53. DOI: 10.1038/nmat2730. View

3.
Yamada A, Koizumi H, Nishimura S, Sonoyama N, Kanno R, Yonemura M . Room-temperature miscibility gap in LixFePO4. Nat Mater. 2006; 5(5):357-60. DOI: 10.1038/nmat1634. View

4.
Kang B, Ceder G . Battery materials for ultrafast charging and discharging. Nature. 2009; 458(7235):190-3. DOI: 10.1038/nature07853. View

5.
Zhou F, Maxisch T, Ceder G . Configurational electronic entropy and the phase diagram of mixed-valence oxides: the case of LixFePO4. Phys Rev Lett. 2006; 97(15):155704. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.155704. View