Abstract
The layered lattice structure of the nickel-rich LiNi0.94Co0.04Al0.02O2 (NCA) cathode material has the advantages of high energy density and low cost. Unfortunately, high nickel materials’ application is limited due to the fast decay of capacity. Doping and coating are effective methods to enhance cycle stability. In this study, the effects of Ti doping on the electrochemical performances of NCA are systematically investigated. Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 and TiO2 are directly mixed, and after sintering, Ti4+ ions diffused uniformly in the LiNi0.94Co0.04Al0.02O2 cathode particles. Besides, (Ni0.4Co0.2Mn0.4)0.78Ti0.22(OH)2 is coated onto the surface of Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 precursor particles with a facile co-precipitation method, and after sintering, Ti4+ ions also diffused uniformly. The cathodes were cycled in the voltage range of 2.8–4.5 V at 1 C. As a result, the discharge capacity of Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 changes from 201.4 to 119.8 mAh g−1, and the battery capacity decayed rapidly within 200 cycles. Although the initial discharge capacity of the doped and covered specimens was not significantly dissimilar from the original precursor specimens, the capacity has only dropped by 20% after 200 charges and discharges.
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Introduction
Global warming is a worldwide issue that requires improvement of energy efficiency and reduction of CO2 emission. Environmental friendly electronic equipment and new energy vehicles are increasingly used daily [1, 2]. As lithium-ion batteries produce effective power for the engine, the mileage that lithium batteries can provide to electric vehicles is critical to market competitiveness. It needs to develop lithium-ion batteries with good cycle stability and a large operating temperature range [3]. One crucial factor in determining the performance of rechargeable batteries is the cathode material [4, 5], among which the layered nickel-rich cathode materials such as LiNiCoAlO2 and LiNiCoMnO2 attract the most attention due to their high specific capacity [6,7,8].
The severe capacity degradation of LiNiCoAlO2 still hinders its commercialization [9]. In recent years, there are numerous reports promoting battery capacity retention rates by doping Mg, Ti, La, Zr, Nb, etc. These elements play a certain in enhancing the cycle performance of electrodes and demonstrate different impacts. The similar ionic radius of Mg2+ and Li+ allows Mg2+ to occupy Li+ sites preferentially and reduce cation mixing [10]. Ti doping can fruitfully impede the structural degradation of the cathode electrode particles. Doping can also reduce the side reaction of the electrolyte and more interfaces [11, 12].
In recent years, high nickel (≥ 90%) materials with extremely high specific capacity are appearing [13,14,15]. In this study, a layer of dense precipitate was formed on the exterior of Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 precursor particles by the co-precipitation method. Meanwhile, the cathode material is formed by physically doping different proportions of nano-TiO2 particles, mixed with lithium and sintered. The increased cycle stability of high nickel materials was analyzed by various characterization techniques to explore the correlation between the electrochemical properties and the microstructure.
Materials and methods
The precursor Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 is a commercial material (Zhejiang Province, China). Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 and TiO2 nanoparticles were fully mixed in an agate mortar and then blended with lithium. The powder was sintered into the cathode materials Li(Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02)1-xTixO2 (x = 0.008, 0.01, 0.012, 0.015), which were named as NCA-Ti0.8%, NCA-Ti1.0%, NCA-Ti1.2%, and NCA-Ti1.5%, respectively. Based on the composition of the coating layer, NiSO4·6H2O, CoSO4·7H2O, MnSO4·H2O, and Ti(SO4)2 were weighted to form a 0.5 mol/L metal salt solution. The pH value of the liquor was modified to 3 by HCl acid due to the existence of Ti4+. The obtained metal salt solution was slowly dripped into the deionized aqueous solution of Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 by a peristaltic pump. The pH value of the liquor was controlled between 10.5 and 10.8 by dripping ammonia water. The resulting mixed solution was rinsed with deionized water 3 times to clean up excessive impurity ions. Then, the washed precipitate was baked in a vacuum drying oven for 12 h to acquire the Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02(OH)2 precursor after coating of (Ni0.4Co0.2Mn0.4)0.78Ti0.22(OH)2. The coated precursor was mixed with lithium and sintered to a cathode material named as NCA-NCM424Ti. An excess of 6% LiOH·H2O was subjoined to reimburse the Li deficiency during high-temperature sintering. The compound was preheated in a tube furnace in pure oxygen at 500 °C for 2 h, and then calcined at 710 °C for 14 h. The electrochemical inert material TiO2 is used to reduce the contact between the surface of the material and the electrolyte, and reduce the side reaction with the electrolyte. The use of the co-precipitation method to form a core–shell structure with high nickel (Li(Ni0.94Co0.04Al0.02)O2) as the core and low nickel (Li(Mn0.4Co0.2Ni0.4)0.78Ti0.22O2) as the outer shell has a stable surface structure.
The loading amount of the active material in the electrode was 3–3.5 mg cm−2. The mass ratio of the three components, i.e., active materials, acetylene black (conductive agents) and polyvinylidene (PVDF, binder), in the cathode material is 8:1:1. The cathode materials were assembled into a button battery (CR2032) in the glove box. The cathode material and the anode lithium sheet were divided by a microporous membrane (Celgard 2300). The current was set as 0.1 C for the earliest 4 cycles to actuate the batteries, and then increased to 1 C in the later cycles. To measure the magnification effect, the battery was cycled 5 times at 0.1 C, 0.2 C, 0.5 C, 1 C, 2 C, and 5 C at a voltage of 2.8–4.5 V, respectively. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and cyclic voltammetry (CV) curves were generated using an electrochemical workstation (PGSTAT302N, AUTOLAB) in the frequency range of 10–2–105 Hz.
We used scanning electron microscope (SEM; FEI Quanta 250 FEG) to reveal the morphology and composition of cathode particles. The surface elements and valence states were analyzed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The crystal structure of the particles was identified by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) of Cu-Kα radiation.
Results and discussion
The morphology of the three precursors was illustrated in Fig. 1. The size of the NCA precursor is 10–15 μm. The round and equiaxed NCA precursor (Fig. 1a) are constituted of needle-like primary particles, whose irregularity renders micro-pores in the NCA precursor (Fig. 1b). In comparison, the surface of the NCA-NCM424Ti precursor is covered by a thin shell, which is formed by stacking sheet hydroxides and hardly changes the size of the precursor. The micro-pores between the primary needle-like particles are diminished (Fig. 1e, f). The precursor of NCA-Ti1.0% demonstrates mediate needle-like crystal grains (Fig. 1c, d), which are apparently different from NCA-NCM424Ti due to the different experimental methods. When the micro-pores between the particles are small, the electrolyte is difficult to penetrate the interior of the precursor, and it reduces the damage to the particles. The composition of different Ti-doped samples was measured by EDS (Table 1). The prepared samples are basically consistent with the theoretical data. Researchers have developed various methods to modify NCA with metal elements. In particular, SiO2 and TiO2 nanoparticles are used to make dry coatings to stabilize the external of the nanoparticles [16,17,18]. But in this article, TiO2 is applied to directly dope on the exterior of the precursor. Many other materials can modify the structure of the surface layer of the positive electrode material, such as the use of ZrO2 coating to enhance the Ni titanium oxide and thermal stability on the surface of the positive electrode material [19]. In addition, Co3O4 is used to coat the NCA cathode material to reduce the charge transfer resistance and increase the capacity retention rate [20]. Based on the above experimental methods, it is an effective way to enhance the durability of the battery by doping with metal or non-metal oxide.
Figure 2 presents the XRD patterns of NCA, NCA-Ti0.8%, NCA-Ti1.0%, NCA-Ti1.2%, NCA-Ti1.5%, and NCA-NCM424Ti. All patterns obtained in the experiment are a layered α-NaFeO2 type lattice structure [21,22,23]. There is no detected impurity phase. It reveals that the infiltration of elements will not change the original layered lattice structure [16, 24]. The ordered layered structure is demonstrated by the obvious splits of (006)/(102) and (018)/(110) peaks [10, 16, 24]. The intensity ratio of peaks I(003) and I(104) reflects the degree of cation mixing, i.e., a higher I(003)/I(104) indicates that cation disturbances are reduced [22, 25]. When I(003)/I(104) is < 1.2, the electrochemical performance deteriorates. When I(003)/I(104) is > 1.5, the material has a complete lattice structure. The I(003)/I(104) and lattice constants of the materials were classified in Table 2. NCA has the smallest I(003)/I(104) ratio of1.5499, while NCA-Ti 1.0% bears the highest value of 1.6916. It confirms that doping an appropriate amount of Ti can reduce cation mixing. The unit cell c/a values of the specimens are all greater than 4.9, which further demonstrates that the layered framework of the synthesized specimen is intact and orderly.
The electronic state of NCA, NCA-Ti1.0%, and NCA-NCM424Ti specimens were analyzed by XPS to study the change of valence state of Ni, Co, Al, and Ti on the exterior of the material. Figure 3a displays the Ni, Co, and Al oxidation state crests in NCA, NCA-Ti1.0%, and NCA-NCM424Ti specimens. Figure 3b shows that the micropores between the needle-like particles are filled with Ti elements through the coating and doping scheme. However, there are slight differences in the binding energies measured by the two experiments. The binding energies of the Ti 2p3/2 and 2p1/2 crests of NCA-NCM424Ti are 457.56 eV and 463.68 eV, which are only 0.05 eV and 0.25 eV lower than those of NCA-Ti1.0%, respectively. Moreover, the Ti 2p3/2 crest in the NCA-Ti1.0% specimen is sharper than NCA-NCM424Ti. It implies that there might be more titanium impurities on the exterior of the NCA-Ti1.0% specimen. The binding energy of the prominent crest of Co 2p3/2 (Co3+) is 778.00 eV. The Co 2p3/2 prominent crest is escorted by a Co(LMM) crest at 777.99 eV and a Ni(LMM) crest at 782.26 eV. Figure 3c illustrates that Co 2p1/2’s blinding energy is 795.57 eV. The Ni 2p XPS spectrum (Fig. 3d) is relatively complex. The Ni 2p1/2 crest at 872.73 eV has a satellite crest at 878.89 eV. The Ni 2p3/2 spectrum with one satellite crest (861.07 eV) has two other crests located at 854.70 eV and 855.87 eV, matching to Ni2+ and Ni3+, separately. Furthermore, the content of Ni2+ accounts for 40.37%. The stability of the particle structure is related to the Ni2+ ion on the surface of the particle [26, 27].
The capacity retention rate presents the electrochemical durability of a lithium battery. The cycle stability charge and discharge curves of the lithium battery in this work all have experienced 200 cycles. Figure 4a shows that the specific discharge capacity of NCA has dropped by 40%, from 201.4 to 119.8 mAh/g. Similarly, under the current state of 1 C, the discharge specific capacity of the first turn of modified battery is 1% lower than that of the unmodified battery. However, the capacity retention rate of NCA-NCM424Ti after the modification has been remarkably enhanced. The discharge specific capacity of NCA-Ti1.0% decreases since 198.5mAh/g in the first round to 165.3 mAh/g, and the capacity preservation reached 83.27%. The highest capacity preservation of NCA-NCM424Ti is 83.68%. Its lithium battery’s capacity slightly increases from 197.6 to 198.5 mAh/g during the primary five cycles. The infiltration of the Mn element may cause a slight increase in the capacity of the coated modified battery in the first few cycles, then declines to 166.1 mAh/g after 200 cycles.
Figure 4b shows the rate performance of lithium batteries. The NCA-Ti1.0% and NCM424Ti can deliver a higher specific discharge capacity while maintaining stable battery charge and discharge under different currents. The capacity of NCA-NAM424Ti is recovered to 208.7 mAh/g when the current is changed from a high rate to a low rate. This shows that both NCA doped with TiO2 or NCA coated with NCM424Ti can increase the ion/electron conductivity of the material.
The polarization of batteries is a common phenomenon in nickel-rich cathode materials. Battery charging is divided into constant current charging and constant voltage charging. The charging and discharging curves (Fig. 4c–f) display that the time of the former increases and the time corresponding to the latter decreases after modified. It makes the extraction and insertion of Li+ easier compared to original NCA precursors. Therefore, the modification suppresses the voltage attenuation.
The cyclic voltammetry curve of the nickel-rich cathode material (Fig. 5a) shows three pronounced redox peaks, which correspond to the three phase transitions H1 → M, M → H2 and H2 → H3, respectively [28, 29]. The extraction and intercalation of Li+ mainly cause the reversibility of electrochemistry. The phase transition peak of the material is pronounced at ~ 3.7 V, where most intercalated lithium ions are released. The reversibility of electrochemistry is reflected by the redox potential difference (ΔV) between the oxidation peak and the reduction peak at the cyclic voltammetry curve [30, 31]. The voltage difference of NCA ΔV1 = 0.107 V means that the reversibility of Li+ extraction and insertion of the original precursor is low. In contrast, the voltage difference between NCA-Ti1.0% and NCA-NCM424Ti is ΔV2 = 0.052 V. Thus, the three peaks clearly indicate that the modification did not damage the original chemical reaction. The reduced ΔV value of the modified specimen accounts for the improvement of reversibility and decreased polarization.
The resistance of the cathode material correlates with the electrochemical evolution of the battery during cycling. The Nyquist diagram of the experimental specimens (Fig. 5b–d) usually consists of two arcs which represent the surface film resistance (Rsf) and charge transfer resistance (Rct). The straight line in the curve is the Warburg resistance related to Li+ diffusion in the positive electrode material [22, 25, 27, 32, 33]. In the current study, the EIS is measured at 4.0 V after 3, 50, and 100 cycles. The modified cathode material always maintains lower Rsf and Rct than the original NCA precursor after 50 or 100 cycles. It is the evidence of the stable interface and better cycle permanence [24]. The increase in Rct could be correlated with the breakage of the particles and the mixing of cations. The relatively stable Rsf of the doped and covered cathode material is connected to the formation of a durable SEI film with higher conductivity. As Ti ions can reduce the mixed content of cations during charging and discharging, the modified cathode material displays better electrochemical performance.
The phase transition is represented by the cyclic voltammetry curve in Fig. 5a. The cyclic voltammetry curves (Fig. 6a–c) under different scan rates (0.1 mV s−1, 0.2 mV s−1, 0.3 mV s−1, 0.4 mV s−1) illustrate the kinetics of the electrode charging and discharging process. The Li+ diffusion coefficient (DLi+) is a constant, which can be calculated by the scan rate v and the redox peak current (\({i}_{p}\)) Randles–Sevcik formula [34, 35]:
where n represents the amount of charge transfer in the redox process (n = 1); A is the area occupied by the cathode material (cm2); C0 represents the number of reactants in the cathode material (mol cm−3); v1/2 is equal to the scan Speed (V s−1). Figure 6d and e display the linear connection between the peak current of the charging and discharging process and the square root of 1/2 times of the scan rate. From the Li+ diffusion coefficient calculated in Table 3, it can be summarized that the Li+ diffusion coefficient of the specimen after doping modification has been noteworthy enhanced. During the reduction peak, the doping also improves the extraction and insertion of Li+.
Both the differential capacity voltage curve (dQ/dV-V) and the CV curve have three sets of redox peaks. The continuous three groups of redox peaks represent the continuous phase transition of H1-H2-H3 [36, 37]. The phase changes details of each circle are more visible in the dQ/dV-V images. As evident in Fig. 7a, the button battery assembled from the original precursor has lost the adjustment ability from the M phase to the second hexagonal phase and then to the third hexagonal phase after 50 charge–discharge cycles. The lack of phase transformation leads to evident polarization, and the capacity cannot be fully utilized. Finally, the battery exhibits a rapid capacity decline, which is generated by the transform of the anisotropic lattice volume [38,39,40,41]. In contrast, the modified materials slow down the rate of particle rupture, and the structure can be retained.
Element mappings on the cross section of NCA-Ti1.0% and NCA-NCM424Ti particles are given in Fig. 8. Ni, Co, Al, Mn, and Ti are confirmed to exist in the particles. During the high-temperature sintering process, the new elements added through the modification are uniformly distributed into the particles. The uniform color mapping inside the particles shows that the coating and doping experiments make the micropores inside the modified particles smaller, which reduces the possibility of particles breaking and creating new interfaces in the process of lithium removal and lithium insertion in the battery. The side reactions between the electrolyte and the new interface are lessened [23, 25]. This also shows that the uniform surface coating and element doping strategy can be used as an industrially scalable method.
The morphologies of NCA, NCA-Ti1.0%, and NCA-NCM424Ti after 200 cycles (Fig. 9) were further characterized through SEM. After 200 cycles of NCA, it is challenging to observe complete spherical particles [42, 43]. On the contrary, complete spherical particles can still be observed in a large area after 200 cycles of NCA-Ti1.0% and NCA-NCM424Ti. There is no crack on the exterior. The electrochemical function of the high nickel cathode material NCA or NCM may have a specific relationship with the mechanical properties of the particles [44,45,46]. The extraction and embedding of Li+ is a cyclical process. The movement of Li+ reduces the mechanical properties of the particles and increases the strain of the particles. Therefore, it is inevitable that NCA particles will crack during the cycle. When Li+ continues to escape from the embedding, the cracks of the particles will increase. The chance of the electrolyte coming into contact with the new interface continues to increase, which creates a phenomenon that continues to deteriorate. When the original precursor circulates to 200 cycles, there are no complete spherical particles (Fig. 9d) to support the charge and discharge of the battery. Therefore, the discharge specific capacity of the original precursor plummeted. Through Ti doping and NCM424Ti coating, the micropores between the secondary needle-shaped particles can be reduced, and the degree of side reaction between the new interface and the electrolyte can be reduced. The integrity of the particles is retained [45]. Therefore, the cycle durability of NCA-Ti1.0% and NCA-NCM424Ti can be significantly boosted.
Conclusion
For all measurements, the battery was tested at room temperature environment between 2.8 and 4.5 V and a current of 1 C. The capacity retention rate of NCA is only 59.48%. The NCA cathode material was modified through the doping experiment, and the electrochemical performance of the battery was greatly enhanced. In the case of no large-scale changes in battery capacity, the highest capacity retention rates of NCA-Ti1.0% and NCA-NCM424Ti are both higher than 83%. The disadvantage of low capacity retention of nickel-rich batteries has been largely upgraded. This indicates that the modification reduces the side reactions at the interface. The enhancement of cycle durability is mostly attributed to protecting the electrode interface and suppressing side reactions. The electrode modification mainly ameliorates the density between the crystal grains through experiments, and the electrolyte cannot easily penetrate the interface. Dense particles have better surface integrity, which enhances structural stability, and makes the particles hard to break. In summary, the cycle durability of the battery is refined. The doping and coating strategies are proved to be economical and practical solutions to strengthen the cycle performance of lithium batteries.
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Funding
This work is financially supported by the Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing (cstc2020jcyj-msxmX0651) and the Scientific and Technological Innovation Foundation of Shunde Graduate School, USTB (grant no. BK19BE025, BK20BE012), and Research Project on Characteristic Innovation of University Teachers in Foshan City (grant no. 2020XCC04).
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Liu, W., Cheng, X., Wang, C. et al. Enhancing high cycle stability of Ni-rich LiNi0.94Co0.04Al0.02O2 layered cathode material. Ionics 27, 4619–4628 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11581-021-04240-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11581-021-04240-5