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Redox Mechanisms and Migration Tendencies in Earth-Abundant 0.7Li2MnO3·0.3LiFeO2 Cathodes: Coupling Spin-Resolved X-ray Abso...

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Chemistry of Materials
Publication Date
Page Numbers
300 to 312
Volume
36
Issue
1

We report the use of iron 1s3p resonant X-ray emission processes to conduct spin-selective, high-energy resolution fluorescence detected X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy (HERFD-XANES) on an iron-containing, lithium- and manganese-rich, fully earth-abundant cathode material, Li1.3Mn0.5Fe0.2O2 (0.7Li2MnO3·0.3LiFeO2). Coupling this technique with conventional Mn K-edge XANES and detailed extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) analysis from both the Mn and Fe vantage points, we gain fundamental insights into the redox processes and migration tendencies of transition metals in this cathode material at the bulk level. We show that during the first charge, Fe3+ undergoes oxidation to form Fe4+ prior to the activation plateau. Toward the end of activation, a significant fraction of the iron is present as tetrahedral Fe3+. This observation reveals that iron migration from octahedral to tetrahedral sites and iron reduction are initiated during activation. Upon first discharge from the activated state, a continuous and overlapping reduction of both Fe and Mn is observed, with Fe largely restored back as an octahedrally coordinated Fe3+. The manganese local environment gradually changes to a distorted cooperative Jahn–Teller Mn3+ structure during discharge, with the clear presence of two Mn–O as well as two Mn–Mn correlation distances at 2.0 V. The significant reduction of manganese in the very first discharge is distinctly different from that seen in typical nickel-based lithium-manganese-rich materials but is similar to that observed for pure Li2MnO3. These findings shed light on key structure–property correlations in the cathode material and point to a causative relationship between the redox mechanisms as well as structural changes endured by the material and relatively poor performance during extended electrochemical cycling.