First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes

Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, 2016. === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (pages 119-140). === Lithium-ion batteries are currently the most widely used consumer energy storage techno...

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Main Author: Dacek, Stephen Thomas, III
Other Authors: Gerbrand Ceder.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109684
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spelling ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-1096842019-05-02T16:23:51Z First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes Dacek, Stephen Thomas, III Gerbrand Ceder. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering. Materials Science and Engineering. Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, 2016. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (pages 119-140). Lithium-ion batteries are currently the most widely used consumer energy storage technology. Recently, lithium-ion batteries have been evaluated for use in mitigating the intermittent power supply of leading renewable energy technologies, thereby enabling their use on the electric grid. In order to facilitate the widespread adoption of electric vehicles and renewable energy technologies, the energy-densities, lifetimes, and cost of batteries must be improved. Due to concerns over long-term lithium availability, sodium-ion batteries are currently being investigated as an alternative to lithium-ion batteries in grid-level applications. In this thesis, we use ab inritio methods to characterize th high-voltage sodium-ion fluorophosphate with formula NaxV2(PO4)2O2yF3-2y as an alternative chemistry to Li-ion batteries. In Chapter 3 we investigate the sodium-extraction limitations in the NaxV2(PO4)2O2yF3-2 fluorophosphate. Specifically, we focus on the potential to reversibly extract sodium beyond the 1 </= x </= 3 range. We find that the capacity limitation arises from a combination of the high voltage of the V 4+/'+ oxidation reaction in the 0 </= x </= 1 region, coupled with a strong sodium-vacancy ordering at x = 1, which prevents the formation of mobile defects in the structure. We deduce that the accessible capacity of Na)V2 (PO4 )2F3 can potentially be expanded to 0 </= x </= 3 by introducing defects into the material and reducing the voltage of the active redox couple in the 0 </= x K 1 range. In Chapter 4, we investigate the stability and voltage characteristics of transition metal substitutions on the fluorophosphate framework. We demonstrate that the inferior performance associated with non-vanadium fluorophosphates is the result of a thermodynamic driving force to release oxygen gas upon charging, in tandem with high voltages. From our calculations, we demonstrate that molybdenum is simultaneously stable in the fluorophosphate framework and capable of reducing the sodium extraction voltage in the 0 K x </= 1 range. We conclude with an analysis of the phase stability and voltage curves of mixed transition metal fluorophosphates along the NaxV 2 (PO4) 202yF 3-2y NaxMo 2 (PO4)202yF3-2y composition line. From the results of this study, we identify NaxV2(PO4)2O2yF3-2 as the most promising candidate system, with the potential to improve the capacity of current fluorophosphate cathodes by 37%. by Stephen Thomas Dacek, III Ph. D. 2017-06-06T19:25:17Z 2017-06-06T19:25:17Z 2016 2016 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109684 988748875 eng MIT theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed, downloaded, or printed from this source but further reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 140 pages application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Materials Science and Engineering.
spellingShingle Materials Science and Engineering.
Dacek, Stephen Thomas, III
First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes
description Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, 2016. === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (pages 119-140). === Lithium-ion batteries are currently the most widely used consumer energy storage technology. Recently, lithium-ion batteries have been evaluated for use in mitigating the intermittent power supply of leading renewable energy technologies, thereby enabling their use on the electric grid. In order to facilitate the widespread adoption of electric vehicles and renewable energy technologies, the energy-densities, lifetimes, and cost of batteries must be improved. Due to concerns over long-term lithium availability, sodium-ion batteries are currently being investigated as an alternative to lithium-ion batteries in grid-level applications. In this thesis, we use ab inritio methods to characterize th high-voltage sodium-ion fluorophosphate with formula NaxV2(PO4)2O2yF3-2y as an alternative chemistry to Li-ion batteries. In Chapter 3 we investigate the sodium-extraction limitations in the NaxV2(PO4)2O2yF3-2 fluorophosphate. Specifically, we focus on the potential to reversibly extract sodium beyond the 1 </= x </= 3 range. We find that the capacity limitation arises from a combination of the high voltage of the V 4+/'+ oxidation reaction in the 0 </= x </= 1 region, coupled with a strong sodium-vacancy ordering at x = 1, which prevents the formation of mobile defects in the structure. We deduce that the accessible capacity of Na)V2 (PO4 )2F3 can potentially be expanded to 0 </= x </= 3 by introducing defects into the material and reducing the voltage of the active redox couple in the 0 </= x K 1 range. In Chapter 4, we investigate the stability and voltage characteristics of transition metal substitutions on the fluorophosphate framework. We demonstrate that the inferior performance associated with non-vanadium fluorophosphates is the result of a thermodynamic driving force to release oxygen gas upon charging, in tandem with high voltages. From our calculations, we demonstrate that molybdenum is simultaneously stable in the fluorophosphate framework and capable of reducing the sodium extraction voltage in the 0 K x </= 1 range. We conclude with an analysis of the phase stability and voltage curves of mixed transition metal fluorophosphates along the NaxV 2 (PO4) 202yF 3-2y NaxMo 2 (PO4)202yF3-2y composition line. From the results of this study, we identify NaxV2(PO4)2O2yF3-2 as the most promising candidate system, with the potential to improve the capacity of current fluorophosphate cathodes by 37%. === by Stephen Thomas Dacek, III === Ph. D.
author2 Gerbrand Ceder.
author_facet Gerbrand Ceder.
Dacek, Stephen Thomas, III
author Dacek, Stephen Thomas, III
author_sort Dacek, Stephen Thomas, III
title First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes
title_short First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes
title_full First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes
title_fullStr First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes
title_full_unstemmed First principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes
title_sort first principles investigation and design of fluorophosphate sodium-ion battery cathodes
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109684
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