Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1039/c4ee03389b
Title: Spinel compounds as multivalent battery cathodes: A systematic evaluation based on ab initio calculations
Authors: Liu, M
Rong, Z
Malik, R
Canepa, P 
Jain, A
Ceder, G
Persson, K.A
Keywords: Aluminum
Calcium
Calculations
Electric batteries
Electrodes
Intercalation
Ions
Lithium
Magnesium compounds
Manganese
Positive ions
Redox reactions
Thermodynamic stability
Transition metal compounds
Transition metals
Ab initio calculations
Activation barriers
Cath-ode materials
First-principles calculation
Higher energy density
Intercalation cathodes
Multivalent cations
Systematic evaluation
Cathodes
electrode
electron density
ion exchange
redox conditions
spinel
thermodynamic property
transition element
Issue Date: 2015
Citation: Liu, M, Rong, Z, Malik, R, Canepa, P, Jain, A, Ceder, G, Persson, K.A (2015). Spinel compounds as multivalent battery cathodes: A systematic evaluation based on ab initio calculations. Energy and Environmental Science 8 (3) : 964-974. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4ee03389b
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Batteries that shuttle multivalent ions such as Mg2+ and Ca2+ ions are promising candidates for achieving higher energy density than available with current Li-ion technology. Finding electrode materials that reversibly store and release these multivalent cations is considered a major challenge for enabling such multivalent battery technology. In this paper, we use recent advances in high-throughput first-principles calculations to systematically evaluate the performance of compounds with the spinel structure as multivalent intercalation cathode materials, spanning a matrix of five different intercalating ions and seven transition metal redox active cations. We estimate the insertion voltage, capacity, thermodynamic stability of charged and discharged states, as well as the intercalating ion mobility and use these properties to evaluate promising directions. Our calculations indicate that the Mn2O4 spinel phase based on Mg and Ca are feasible cathode materials. In general, we find that multivalent cathodes exhibit lower voltages compared to Li cathodes; the voltages of Ca spinels are ∼0.2 V higher than those of Mg compounds (versus their corresponding metals), and the voltages of Mg compounds are ∼1.4 V higher than Zn compounds; consequently, Ca and Mg spinels exhibit the highest energy densities amongst all the multivalent cation species. The activation barrier for the Al3+ ion migration in the Mn2O4 spinel is very high (∼1400 meV for Al3+ in the dilute limit); thus, the use of an Al based Mn spinel intercalation cathode is unlikely. Amongst the choice of transition metals, Mn-based spinel structures rank highest when balancing all the considered properties. © 2015 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Source Title: Energy and Environmental Science
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/180960
ISSN: 17545692
DOI: 10.1039/c4ee03389b
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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