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Journal Article

Metal–oxygen decoordination stabilizes anion redox in Li-rich oxides

Reversible high voltage redox chemistry is an essential component of many electrochemical technologies, from (electro)catalysts to lithium-ion batteries. Oxygen anion redox has garnered intense interest for such applications, particularly lithium ion batteries, as it offers substantial redox capacity at > 4 V vs. Li/Li+ in a variety of oxide materials. However, oxidation of oxygen is almost universally correlated with irreversible local structural transformations, voltage hysteresis, and voltage fade, which currently preclude its widespread use. By comprehensively studying the Li2-xIr1-ySnyO3 model system, which exhibits tunable oxidation state and structural evolution with yupon cycling, we reveal that this structure-redox coupling arises from the local stabilization of short ~ 1.8 Å metal-oxygen π bonds and ~ 1.4 Å O–O dimers during oxygen redox, which occurs in Li2-xIr1-ySnyO3 through ligand-to-metal charge transfer. Crucially, formation of these oxidized oxygen species necessitates the decoordination of oxygen to a single covalent bonding partner through formation of vacancies at neighboring cation sites, driving cation disorder. These insights establish a point defect explanation for why anion redox often occurs alongside local structural disordering and voltage hysteresis during cycling. Our findings offer an explanation for the unique electrochemical properties of lithium-rich layered oxides, with implications generally for the design of materials employing oxygen redox chemistry.

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Author(s)
William Gent
William Chueh
Journal Name
Nature Materials
Publication Date
February 4, 2019
DOI
10.1038/s41563-018-0276-1