Exploration of oxyfluoride frameworks as Na-ion cathodes
Debolina Deb, Gopalakrishnan Sai Gautam

TL;DR
This study uses computational methods to explore oxyfluoride perovskite structures as potential Na-ion battery cathodes, identifying promising compositions with high voltage and stability for experimental testing.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic computational investigation of transition metal oxyfluorides with perovskite structures as novel Na-ion cathode materials, highlighting stable and high-voltage candidates.
Findings
F-rich perovskites exhibit higher voltages than O-rich ones.
Six stable/metastable F-rich perovskites identified as promising cathodes.
Certain compositions show high Na$^+$ mobility suitable for experimental validation.
Abstract
Na-ion batteries (NIBs) are increasingly looked at as a viable alternative to Li-ion batteries due to the abundance, low cost, and thermal stability of Na-based systems. To improve the practical utilization of NIBs in applications, it is important to boost the energy and power densities of the electrodes being used, via discovery of novel candidate materials. Thus, we explore the chemical space of transition metal containing oxyfluorides (TMOFs) that adopt the perovskite structure as possible NIB electrodes. Our choice of the perovskite structure is motivated by the `large' cationic tunnels that can accommodate Na, while the chemistry of TMOFs is motivated by the high electronegativity and inductive effect of F, which can possibly lead to higher voltages. We use density functional theory based calculations to estimate the ground state polymorphs, average Na (de)intercalation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsZeolite Catalysis and Synthesis
