Surface Vacancy Engineering Re-Routes First-Cycle Redox for Stabilized Li-Rich Layered Cathodes

  • Seongkoo Kang
  • , Dayeon Choi
  • , Suwon Lee
  • , Dahye Yoon
  • , Hakwoo Lee
  • , Gi Hyeok Lee
  • , Daseul Han
  • , Jiliang Zhang
  • , Olaf J. Borkiewicz
  • , Kyung Wan Nam
  • , Wanli Yang
  • , Yong Mook Kang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We demonstrate that atomic-scale surface disorder can control the first-cycle redox sequence of Li-rich layered oxides, eliminating the detrimental process of oxygen release and lattice collapse that degrades performance. In Li1.14Ni0.32Mn0.54O2 (LNMO), a simple chemical treatment introduces oxygen and transition metal (TM) vacancies confined to the particle surface while preserving the bulk layered framework. Multi-modal synchrotron analyses reveal that these vacancies trigger an early oxygen oxidation below 4.4 V, delay nickel oxidation to higher potential, and suppress the formation of covalent Ni4+─O states. This modified pathway prevents irreversible oxygen release, suppresses manganese dissolution, and maintains metal-oxygen coordination at high voltages. Consequently, the treated cathode delivers higher first-cycle Coulombic efficiency (CE), mitigated voltage fade, and superior capacity retention. By directly linking engineered surface disorder to redox reactions and associated structural transformations, this work establishes a general design principle for durable, high-energy-density cathodes.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere17720
JournalAngewandte Chemie - International Edition
Volume65
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2 Jan 2026

Keywords

  • Disorder
  • Li-ion battery
  • Li-rich layered cathodes
  • Oxygen redox
  • Vacancy engineering

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Surface Vacancy Engineering Re-Routes First-Cycle Redox for Stabilized Li-Rich Layered Cathodes'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this