Spatial Heterogenous Redox Couples Degradation in Sodium-Ion Battery Cathode Materials and the Mitigation of Voltage Fade by Blocking Oxygen Release
Jiangnan Huang, Zhichen Xue, Sang‐Jun Lee, Hongyi Chen, Xiaobo Ji, Ke Du
Abstract
The use of anionic redox has become a new paradigm for improving the energy density of rechargeable batteries, which is essential for improving the market competitiveness of sodium-ion batteries. However, issues such as voltage attenuation and cycling stability degradation persist in layered oxide anion redox cathode materials. In this study, we systematically investigate the classic Na-ion cathode material Na 0.6 Li 0.2 Mn 0.8 O 2, and the primary causes of voltage decay are identified as the activation of cations and the reduction in anion redox activity. In addition, the activation of cations is closely associated with anion reactions. Through the application of sophisticated multiscale synchrotron absorption spectroscopy and imaging techniques, we have identified a pronounced pattern of spatially dependent degradation in the evolution of redox couples, which is more evident from the material’s surface to its core. With this understanding, we introduced a surface fluorination approach that modulates the local chemical coordination environment. This strategy increases the formation energy of surface oxygen vacancies and locks transition metals oxide state. Consequently, it enables more reversible anionic redox reactions, which block the spatial progression of degradation and mitigates voltage decay.