MRS Meetings and Events

 

DS01.16.04 2022 MRS Spring Meeting

Insights from Computational Studies on the Anisotropic Volume Change of LixNiO2 at High State of Charge (x < 0.25)

When and Where

May 23, 2022
2:00pm - 2:15pm

DS01-Virtual

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Juan Garcia1,Joshua Gabriel1,Noah Paulson1,John Low1,Marius Stan1,Hakim Iddir1

Argonne National Laboratory1

Abstract

Juan Garcia1,Joshua Gabriel1,Noah Paulson1,John Low1,Marius Stan1,Hakim Iddir1

Argonne National Laboratory1
The need for high-capacity Li-ion battery cathodes has favored the increase of Ni content in commercial battery cells. However, at high state of charge (SOC), Ni-rich materials undergo a phase transition and volume collapse with deleterious effects on battery performance. It is uncertain whether this drastic volume change is caused by the phase transition or not. To provide more insight into the volume-phase transition relationship in the high Ni cathode Li<sub>x</sub>NiO<sub>2</sub>, we performed density functional theory calculations, along with molecular dynamics simulations using machine learned potentials to calculate the temperature and composition dependent free energy differences between the suspected phases at high state of charge (x&lt;0.25). We find that the calculated free energy difference between the suspected phases containing different oxygen stacking sequences is small at room temperature. Further, we find that the collapse of the layered LiNiO<sub>2</sub> c-lattice parameter at high SOCs is mainly due to the electronic depletion of the oxygen sublattice and the lack of screening from positive Li ions. The interactions between adjacent oxygen ions across an empty Li layer (NiO<sub>2</sub>), are largely controlled by Van de Waals interactions and are in fact similar regardless of the oxygen stacking—which explains the negligible free energy differences between O1 and O3 stacking in NiO<sub>2</sub>.

Symposium Organizers

Mathieu Bauchy, University of California, Los Angeles
Mathew Cherukara, Argonne National Laboratory
Grace Gu, University of California, Berkeley
Badri Narayanan, University of Louisville

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature