Breaking the Electronic Conductivity Bottleneck of Manganese Oxide Family for High‐Power Fluorinated Graphite Composite Cathode by Ligand‐Field High‐Dimensional Constraining Strategy
Jia Yu, Da Wang, Guoxin Wang, Yanhua Cui, Siqi Shi
Abstract
Abstract Primary lithium fluorinated graphite (Li/CF x ) batteries with superior energy density are an indispensable energy supply for multiple fields but suffer from sluggish reaction kinetics of the CF x cathode. Designing composite cathodes emerges as a solution to this problem. Despite the optimal composite component for CF x , the manganese oxide family represented by MnO 2 is still faced with an intrinsic electronic conductivity bottleneck, which severely limits the power density of the composite cathode. Here, a cation‐induced high‐dimensional constraining strategy from the perspective of ligand‐field stacking structure topological design, which breaks the molecular orbital hybridization of pristine semiconductive oxides to transform them into the high‐conductivity metallic state while competitively maintaining structural stability, is proposed. Through first‐principles phase diagram calculations, mixed‐valent Mn 5 O 8 () is explored as an ideal high‐dimensional constraining material with satisfied conductivity and large‐scale production feasibility. Experiments demonstrate that the as‐proposed CF x @ Mn 5 O 8 composite cathode achieves 2.36 times the power density (11399 W kg −1 ) of pristine CF x and a higher CF x conversion ratio (86%). Such a high‐dimensional field‐constraining strategy is rooted in the established four‐quadrant electronic structure tuning framework, which fundamentally changes the orbital symmetry under the ligand field to overcome the common conductivity challenge of wide transition metal oxide materials.