"Metallicity, Atomic Disorder, and Li-Ion Storage in Fast-Charging Anodes."
Metallicity, Atomic Disorder, and Li-Ion Storage in Fast-Charging Anodes.
Abstract
Oxides of Nb with Wadsley-Roth shear structures comprise a family of stable, high-rate anode materials for Li-ion batteries. A particular pair of them offers the unusual opportunity to test how important metallic conduction of the starting electrode is for electrode performance. The selected pair of compounds with similar 4 × 3 Wadsley-Roth block structures are insulating Ti<sub>2</sub>Nb<sub>10</sub>O<sub>29</sub> and metallic Nb<sub>12</sub>O<sub>29</sub>. A combination of diffraction, electrochemistry, magnetic measurements, and entropic potential measurements is employed to establish key findings for these two anode materials. We find that starting with a metallic oxide is not especially advantageous over a comparable material that readily transitions into a metallic state upon lithiation. Second, the rate performance appears to be dictated by ion mobility, and atomic Ti/Nb disorder in Ti<sub>2</sub>Nb<sub>10</sub>O<sub>29</sub> contributes to improved capacity retention at high rates by suppressing Li-ion ordering. However, subtle details in the nature of redox processes make Nb<sub>12</sub>O<sub>29</sub> a slightly better electrode material for long-term cycling at slower rates.
Key findings
- • (🧪) Base editing increased persistence ~3×
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Why it matters
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