Tailored ordering enables high-capacity cathode materials
Abstract
Newly designed Li-ion battery cathode materials with high capacity and greater flexibility in chemical composition will be critical for the growing electric vehicles market. Cathode structures with cation disorder were once considered suboptimal, but recent demonstrations have highlighted their potential in LiMO chemistries with a wide range of metal combinations M. By relaxing the strict requirements of maintaining ordered Li diffusion pathways, countless multi-metal compositions in LiMO may become viable, aiding the quest for high-capacity cobalt-free cathodes. A challenge presented by this freedom in composition space is designing compositions which possess specific, tailored types of both long- and short-range orderings, which can ensure both phase stability and Li diffusion. However, the combinatorial complexity associated with local cation environments impedes the development of general design guidelines for favorable orderings. Here we propose ordering design frameworks from computational ordering descriptors, which in tandem with low-cost heuristics and elemental statistics can be used to simultaneously achieve compositions that possess favorable phase stability as well as configurations amenable to Li diffusion. Utilizing this computational framework, validated through multiple successful synthesis and characterization experiments, we not only demonstrate the design of LiCrFeO, showcasing initial charge capacity of 234 mAhg and 320 mAhg in its 20% Li-excess variant LiCrFeO, but also present the elemental ordering statistics for 32 elements, informed by one of the most extensive first-principles studies of ordering tendencies known to us.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2506.12545,
title = {Tailored ordering enables high-capacity cathode materials},
author = {Tzu-chen Liu and Adolfo Salgado-Casanova and So Yubuchi and Bianca Baldassarri and Muratahan Aykol and Jun Yoshida and Hisatsugu Yamasaki and Yizhou Zhu and Steven B. Torrisi and Christopher Wolverton},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.12545},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
47 pages, 12 figures