# Cation Disorder and Lithium Insertion Mechanism of Wadsley--Roth   Crystallographic Shear Phases

**Authors:** Can P. Ko\c{c}er, Kent J. Griffith, Clare P. Grey, Andrew J. Morris

arXiv: 1906.04192 · 2019-09-26

## TL;DR

This study uses first-principles calculations to understand cation disorder, lithium insertion mechanisms, and electronic structure in Wadsley--Roth phases, revealing principles that could improve lithium-ion battery electrode design.

## Contribution

It provides a detailed mechanistic understanding of lithium insertion and structural evolution in niobium-tungsten oxide shear phases using enumeration and density-functional theory.

## Key findings

- Lithium insertion occurs via a three-step mechanism.
- Tungsten prefers tetrahedral and block-central sites.
- Lattice contraction buffers volume expansion during lithiation.

## Abstract

Wadsley--Roth crystallographic shear phases form a family of compounds that have attracted attention due to their excellent performance as lithium-ion battery electrodes. The complex crystallographic structure of these materials poses a challenge for first-principles computational modelling and hinders the understanding of their structural, electronic and dynamic properties. In this article, we study three different niobium-tungsten oxide crystallographic shear phases (Nb$_{12}$WO$_{33}$, Nb$_{14}$W$_{3}$O$_{44}$, Nb$_{16}$W$_5$O$_{55}$) using an enumeration-based approach and first-principles density-functional theory calculations. We report common principles governing the cation disorder, lithium insertion mechanism, and electronic structure of these materials. Tungsten preferentially occupies tetrahedral and block-central sites within the block-type crystal structures. The lithium insertion proceeds via a three-step mechanism, associated with an anisotropic evolution of the host lattice. Our calculations reveal an important connection between long-range and local structural changes: in the second step of the mechanism, the removal of local structural distortions leads to the contraction of the lattice along specific crystallographic directions, buffering the volume expansion of the material. Niobium-tungsten oxide shear structures host small amounts of localised electrons during initial lithium insertion due to the confining effect of the blocks, but quickly become metallic upon further lithiation. We argue that the combination of local, long-range, and electronic structural evolution over the course of lithiation is beneficial to the performance of these materials as battery electrodes. The mechanistic principles we establish arise from the compound-independent crystallographic shear structure, and are therefore likely to apply to Ti/Nb oxide or pure Nb oxide shear phases.

## Full text

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## Figures

19 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.04192/full.md

## References

60 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.04192/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.04192