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chemistry

The effects of acid treatment on the electrochemical properties of 0.5 Li2 MnO3·0.5 Li Ni0.44 Co0.25 Mn0.31 O2 electrodes in lithium cells

Journal of the Electrochemical Society, Volume 153, No. 6, Year 2006

The electrochemical properties of 0.5 Li2 Mn O3 0.5 Li Ni0.44 Co0.25 Mn0.31 O2 electrodes, when preconditioned and activated with acid for 2-24 h, have been studied in lithium cells. Powder X-ray diffraction data and electrochemical measurements provide supporting evidence for an intergrown, composite electrode structure from which Li2 O can be leached from the Li2 Mn O3 (Li2 OMn O2) component with acid, thereby mimicking the electrochemical charge process at high potentials (>4.5 V). The Mn O2 -rich domains generated by acid treatment are reduced during electrochemical discharge at a lower potential than electrochemically generated Mn O2 -rich domains. With prolonged cycling between 4.6 and 2.0 V, dQdV plots of untreated and acid-treated electrodes develop similar, but not identical, character, suggesting a coalescence and redox interaction of the manganese ions in Mn O2 -rich and Ni0.44 Co0.25 Mn0.31 O2 regions of the structure. Acid treatment eliminates the first-cycle capacity loss of the electrodes, consistent with earlier reports for related systems, but it damages their cycling stability and rate capability. © 2006 The Electrochemical Society.

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