Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1286487 Journal of Power Sources 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The carbon-hybridized Li2MnSiO4 nanostructured powders show the stable cycling performance with a capacity of ∼190 mAh g−1.•HE-XRD and PDF analyses were carried out to study the discharged/charged structures.•A long-range ordered structure dissipates in the discharged samples but each discharging process recovers it.•The disappearance of the long-range order is caused by a local structure accommodating distortions of the MnO4 tetrahedra.

The stable cycling performance with a high discharge capacity of ∼190 mAh g−1 in a carbon-hybridized Li2MnSiO4 nanostructured powder has prompted an experimental investigation of the charged/discharged structures using synchrotron-based and laboratory-based X-rays and atomic-pair distribution-function (PDF) analyses. A novel method of in-situ spray pyrolysis of a precursor solution with glucose as a carbon source enabled the successful synthesis of the carbon-hybridized Li2MnSiO4 nanoparticles. The XRD patters of the discharged (lithiated) samples exhibit a long-range ordered structure characteristic of the (β) Li2MnSiO4 crystalline phase (space group Pmn21) which dissipates in the charged (delithiated) samples. However, upon discharging the long-range ordered structure recovers in each cycle. The disordered structure, according to the PDF analysis, is mainly due to local distortions of the MnO4 tetrahedra which show a mean Mn–O nearest neighbor distance shorter than that of the long-range ordered phase. These results corroborate the notion of the smaller Mn3+/Mn4+ ionic radii in the Li extracted phase versus the larger Mn2+ ionic radius in Li inserted phase. Thus Li extraction/insertion drives the fluctuation between the disordered and the long-range ordered structures.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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