First-principles study of structural stability, dynamical and mechanical properties of Li2FeSiO4 polymorphs
P. Vajeeston, H. Fjellv{\aa}g

TL;DR
This study uses density-functional calculations to analyze the stability, electronic, thermodynamic, and mechanical properties of Li2FeSiO4 polymorphs, revealing their structural stability, phase transitions under pressure, and poor ionic conductivity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive first-principles analysis of Li2FeSiO4 polymorphs, identifying the most stable structure and their mechanical and electronic properties, which aids in understanding its potential as a cathode material.
Findings
Monoclinic P21 is the ground state structure.
Pressure induces phase transitions at 0.38 and 1.93 GPa.
Li-ion conductivity is very low in all polymorphs.
Abstract
Li2FeSiO4 is an important alternative cathode for next generation Li-ion batteries due to its high theoretical capacity (330 mA h/g). However, its development has faced significant challenges arising from structural complexity and poor ionic conductivity. In the present work, the relative stability, electronic structure, thermodynamics, and mechanical properties of potential cathode material Li2FeSiO4 and its polymorphs have been studied by state-of-the-art density-functional calculations. Among the 11 structural arrangements considered for the structural optimization calculations, the experimentally known monoclinic P21 modification is found to be the ground state structure. The application of pressure originates a sequence of phase transitions according to P21 - Pmn21 - I222, and the estimated values of the critical pressure are found to be 0.38 and 1.93 GPa. The electronic structures…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvancements in Battery Materials · Semiconductor materials and interfaces · Surface and Thin Film Phenomena
