First-principles study of strain behavior in iron-based fluorides of tungsten bronze type as cathode materials for alkali-ion batteries
A. F. Baumann, D. Mutter, D. F. Urban, C. Els\"asser

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to explore strain behavior in iron-based tungsten bronze structures as potential zero-strain cathode materials for alkali-ion batteries, aiming to improve long-term stability.
Contribution
It introduces a computational approach to identify and understand zero-strain cathode materials within tungsten bronze structures, including a descriptor for predicting volume change.
Findings
Na$_x$FeF$_3$ exhibits near-zero volume change during sodiation.
A qualitative descriptor for local volume change aids in screening ZS materials.
Structural prerequisites for ZS behavior are identified.
Abstract
Mechanical stresses and strains in the microstructure of cathode materials evolving during charge/discharge cycles can reduce the long-term stability of intercalation-type alkali-metal-ion batteries. In this context, crystalline compounds exhibiting zero-strain (ZS) behavior are of particular interest. Near-ZS sodiation was experimentally measured in the tetragonal tungsten bronze (TTB) type compound NaFeF. Using a first-principles method based on density functional theory, we investigate the potential of iron-based fluoride compounds with tungsten bronze (TB) structures as ZS cathode materials. Simulations were conducted to study the intercalation of the alkali metal ions Li, Na, and K into the TTB and two related TB structures of the cubic perovskite (PTB) and hexagonal (HTB) types. We describe compensating local volume effects…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFiber-reinforced polymer composites
