Ligand‐to‐Metal Charge Transfer Motivated the Whole‐Voltage‐Range Anionic Redox in P2‐Type Layered Oxide Cathodes

Author:

Tang Anchun1,Zhao Ruixuan1,Wu Yuan1,Wan Chubin1ORCID,Li Zhengyao2,Meng Xianhe3,Sun Kai2,Li Ruikai1,Zhang Hexiang1,Chen Dongfeng2,Ju Xin1

Affiliation:

1. University of Science and Technology Beijing Beijing 100083 China

2. Neutron Scattering Laboratory Department of Nuclear Physics China Institute of Atomic Energy Beijing 102413 China

3. College of Materials and Chemistry China Jiliang University Hangzhou 310018 China

Abstract

AbstractAnionic redox in layered transition metal oxides (TMOs) cathodes presents significant opportunities for achieving high energy density batteries. However, the O 2p non‐bonding state can only undergo redox at high voltages and is often accompanied by severe structural distortion. In this study, the whole‐voltage‐range anionic redox has successfully been achieved in Metal‐organic frameworks (MOF) derived chemically homogeneous P2‐Na0.67Ni0.2Mg0.2Mn0.6O2 (NNMMO). Through a systematic analysis of the orbital combinations of TMs and O, it is found that the Mg‐induced O 2p non‐bonding state as an electron donor, forming strong π‐type interactions between Ni 3d spin‐down t2g orbitals. The resulting π‐configurational oxygen occupies an anti‐bonding state just below the Fermi level, exhibiting high oxidation activity and stability. Additionally, the high covalency between Mn and O increases the strength of the Mn–O bond, mitigating the structural aberration of NNMMO. As a result, NNMMO demonstrates a high capacity of 216 mAh g−1 at 0.1 C and stable battery performance, with a capacity retention of ≈90% after 500 cycles at 2 C. This π‐type anionic redox and intrinsic competition mechanism present an alternative strategy for achieving advanced cathode materials for sodium‐ion batteries.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology

China Scholarship Council

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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