Understanding the limits to short-range order suppression in many-component disordered rock salt lithium-ion cathode materials†
Abstract
Suppressing unfavourable short-range ordering in disordered rock salt lithium-ion cathode materials is seen as a key research goal on their route to commercialisation. In this study we use cluster-expansion-driven Monte Carlo simulations of a model 3d-transition metal disordered rock salt oxyfluoride system to investigate the effect of many component cation substitution on the suppression of short-range ordering in disordered rock salt cathode materials. We confirm that many-cation substitution is effective in suppressing short-range ordering, but has diminishing returns on increasing the number of component transition metals, or alternatively, increasing the size of the long-range lithium diffusion network as the number of transition metals increases. We particularly emphasize the critical role of lithium excess and fluorine content in the success of the “high-entropy” cation substitution strategy: short-range ordering is strongly influenced by cation–anion bonding preferences, underscoring the need to consider the full composition of the target system when designing high entropy lithium-ion cathode materials.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Celebrating the scientific accomplishments of RSC Fellows