Effects of Calcination Conditions on the Structural and Electrochemical Behaviors of High‐Nickel, Cobalt‐Free LiNi<sub>0.9</sub>Mn<sub>0.1</sub>O<sub>2</sub> Cathode
Steven Lee, Cheng Li, Arumugam Manthiram
Abstract
Abstract Eliminating cobalt from high‐nickel layered oxide cathodes lowers the cost of lithium‐ion batteries for electric vehicles. However, cobalt‐free cathodes with high Mn 4+ and Ni 2+ contents are prone to Li/Ni mixing after synthesis, potentially compromising battery energy density, rate capability, and cycling stability. Without cobalt facilitating cation ordering in the layered structure, the degree of Li/Ni mixing in cobalt‐free cathodes depends heavily on the calcination conditions. In this study, a systematic exploration of calcination temperatures and LiOH ratio for LiNi 0.9 Mn 0.1 O 2 (NM‐90) provides detailed insights into the optimal synthesis conditions for high‐capacity cobalt‐free cathodes with extended cycle life. Surprisingly, high Li/Ni mixing does not necessarily lead to poor cycling stability whereas low Li/Ni mixing does not guarantee a long cycle life. More importantly, although excessive calcination temperature can further decrease Li/Ni mixing, it does not necessarily enhance capacity. Instead, the pernicious effects from the H2 → H3 phase transition are amplified due to a pronounced two‐phase reaction. An extensive suite of chemical and structural characterization methods uncovers a correlation between elevated calcination temperature, phase transformation, cation ordering, and capacity fading behavior: “overcooking” high‐nickel, cobalt‐free cathodes induce structural arrangement toward that of LiNiO 2 , with exacerbated lattice distortion and surface instability accelerating capacity fade.