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2020
Journal Article
Title
Mechanistic Insights into the Lithiation and Delithiation of Iron-Doped Zinc Oxide: The Nucleation Site Model
Abstract
The detailed mechanistic understanding of the electrochemical reactions occurring in lithium-ion battery electrodes is fundamental for their further improvement. Conversion/alloying materials (CAMs), such as Zn0.9Fe0.1O, one of the most recent alternatives for classic graphite anodes, offer superior specific capacity and rate capability. However, despite fast kinetics, CAMs suffer from a large voltage hysteresis upon de-/lithiation and improvable Coulombic efficiencies when cycled in a large voltage window. Here, we use isothermal microcalorimetry together with operando X-ray diffraction as well as ex situ 7Li NMR and 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopies to investigate the asymmetric reaction mechanism of the lithiation and delithiation of Zn0.9Fe0.1O during electrochemical cycling. We demonstrate that the measured heat flow is correlated with compositional changes of the electrode material. This combination of highly complementary techniques allows us to propose a new nucleation site model for the initial lithiation of Zn0.9Fe0.1O. Modeling the heat flow provides concrete evidence for the deleterious impact of high anodic cutoff potentials (>2 V), resulting in a continuous quasireversible solid electrolyte interphase formation. The presented methodology is suggested to provide improved insights into the reaction mechanism of conversion- and alloying-type energy-storage materials.
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