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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nucleation-promoting and growth-limiting synthesis of disordered rock-salt Li-ion cathode materials.

Year:
2025
Authors:
Ahmed H et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Mining and Materials Engineering · Canada

Abstract

Disordered rock-salt oxides and oxyfluorides are promising positive electrode materials for high-performance lithium-ion batteries free of nickel and cobalt. However, conventional synthesis methods rely on post-synthesis pulverization to achieve cycling-appropriate particle sizes, offering limited control over particle microstructure and crystallinity. This accelerates degradation and complicates secondary particle processing. Here we present a synthesis strategy that enhances nucleation while suppressing particle growth and agglomeration across various disordered rock-salt compositions, including lithium-manganese-titanium oxide, lithium-manganese-niobium oxide, and lithium-nickel-titanium oxide systems. Applied to Li<sub>1.2</sub>Mn<sub>0.4</sub>Ti<sub>0.4</sub>O<sub>2</sub>, this method yields highly crystalline, well-dispersed sub-200 nm particles that form homogeneous electrode films with stable cycling behavior. Tested in cells with lithium metal as the counter electrode, these electrodes deliver ~200 mAh/g with 85% capacity retention relative to the first cycle after 100 cycles (20 mA/g, 1.5-4.8 V), and an average discharge voltage loss of 4.8 mV per cycle, compared to 38.6% retention and 7.5 mV loss per cycle for electrodes derived from pulverized solid-state particles. This approach suggests a route to enhance the performance and durability of disordered rock-salt electrodes for sustainable lithium-ion batteries.

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Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/40593730