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Lithium cobalt oxide

Lithium cobalt oxide, sometimes called lithium cobaltate[2] or lithium cobaltite,[3] is a chemical compound with formula LiCoO
2
. The cobalt atoms are formally in the +3 oxidation state, hence the IUPAC name lithium cobalt(III) oxide.

Lithium cobalt oxide[1]

__ Li+     __ Co3+     __ O2−
Names
IUPAC name
lithium cobalt(III) oxide
Other names
lithium cobaltite
Identifiers
  • 12190-79-3 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChemSpider
  • 11262976
ECHA InfoCard 100.032.135
EC Number
  • 235-362-0
  • 23670860
  • DTXSID40893216
  • InChI=1S/Co.Li.2O/q+3;+1;2*-2
    Key: LSZLYXRYFZOJRA-UHFFFAOYSA-N
  • [Li+].[O-2].[Co+3].[O-2]
Properties
LiCoO
2
Molar mass 97.87 g mol−1
Appearance dark blue or bluish-gray crystalline solid
Hazards
Occupational safety and health (OHS/OSH):
Main hazards
harmful
GHS labelling:
Danger
H317, H350, H360
P201, P202, P261, P272, P280, P281, P302+P352, P308+P313, P321, P333+P313, P363, P405, P501
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

Lithium cobalt oxide is a dark blue or bluish-gray crystalline solid,[4] and is commonly used in the positive electrodes of lithium-ion batteries.

Structure edit

The structure of LiCoO
2
has been studied with numerous techniques including x-ray diffraction, electron microscopy, neutron powder diffraction, and EXAFS.[5]

The solid consists of layers of monovalent lithium cations (Li+
) that lie between extended anionic sheets of cobalt and oxygen atoms, arranged as edge-sharing octahedra, with two faces parallel to the sheet plane.[6] The cobalt atoms are formally in the trivalent oxidation state (Co3+
) and are sandwiched between two layers of oxygen atoms (O2−
).

In each layer (cobalt, oxygen, or lithium), the atoms are arranged in a regular triangular lattice. The lattices are offset so that the lithium atoms are farthest from the cobalt atoms, and the structure repeats in the direction perpendicular to the planes every three cobalt (or lithium) layers. The point group symmetry is   in Hermann-Mauguin notation, signifying a unit cell with threefold improper rotational symmetry and a mirror plane. The threefold rotational axis (which is normal to the layers) is termed improper because the triangles of oxygen (being on opposite sides of each octahedron) are anti-aligned.[7]

Preparation edit

Fully reduced lithium cobalt oxide can be prepared by heating a stoichiometric mixture of lithium carbonate Li
2
CO
3
and cobalt(II,III) oxide Co
3
O
4
or metallic cobalt at 600–800 °C, then annealing the product at 900 °C for many hours, all under an oxygen atmosphere.[6][3][7]

 
Nanometer-sized and sub-micrometer sized LCO synthesis route[8]

Nanometer-size particles more suitable for cathode use can also be obtained by calcination of hydrated cobalt oxalate β-CoC
2
O
4
·2H
2
O
, in the form of rod-like crystals about 8 μm long and 0.4 μm wide, with lithium hydroxide LiOH, up to 750–900 °C.[9]

A third method uses lithium acetate, cobalt acetate, and citric acid in equal molar amounts, in water solution. Heating at 80 °C turns the mixture into a viscous transparent gel. The dried gel is then ground and heated gradually to 550 °C.[10]

Use in rechargeable batteries edit

The usefulness of lithium cobalt oxide as an intercalation electrode was discovered in 1980 by an Oxford University research group led by John B. Goodenough and Tokyo University's Koichi Mizushima.[11]

The compound is now used as the cathode in some rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, with particle sizes ranging from nanometers to micrometers.[10][9] During charging, the cobalt is partially oxidized to the +4 state, with some lithium ions moving to the electrolyte, resulting in a range of compounds Li
x
CoO
2
with 0 < x < 1.[3]

Batteries produced with LiCoO
2
cathodes have very stable capacities, but have lower capacities and power than those with cathodes based on (especially nickel-rich) nickel-cobalt-aluminum (NCA) or nickel-cobalt-manganese (NCM) oxides.[12] Issues with thermal stability are better for LiCoO
2
cathodes than other nickel-rich chemistries although not significantly. This makes LiCoO
2
batteries susceptible to thermal runaway in cases of abuse such as high temperature operation (>130 °C) or overcharging. At elevated temperatures, LiCoO
2
decomposition generates oxygen, which then reacts with the organic electrolyte of the cell, this reaction is often seen in Lithium-Ion batteries where the battery becomes highly volatile and must be recycled in a safe manner. The decomposition of LiCoO2 is a safety concern due to the magnitude of this highly exothermic reaction, which can spread to adjacent cells or ignite nearby combustible material.[13] In general, this is seen for many lithium ion battery cathodes.

The delithiation process is usually by chemical means,[14] although a novel physical process has been developed based on ion sputtering and annealing cycles,[15] leaving the material properties intact.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 442704 - Lithium cobalt(III) oxide (2012-09-14). "Sigma-Aldrich product page". Sigmaaldrich.com. Retrieved 2013-01-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ A. L. Emelina, M. A. Bykov, M. L. Kovba, B. M. Senyavin, E. V. Golubina (2011), "Thermochemical properties of lithium cobaltate". Russian Journal of Physical Chemistry, volume 85, issue 3, pages 357–363; doi:10.1134/S0036024411030071
  3. ^ a b c Ondřej Jankovský, Jan Kovařík, Jindřich Leitner, Květoslav Růžička, David Sedmidubský (2016) "Thermodynamic properties of stoichiometric lithium cobaltite LiCoO2". Thermochimica Acta, volume 634, pages 26-30. doi:10.1016/j.tca.2016.04.018
  4. ^ LinYi Gelon New Battery Materials Co., Ltd, "Lithium Cobalt Oxide (LiCoO2) for lithium ion battery ". Catalog entry, accessed on 2018-04-10,
  5. ^ I. Nakai; K. Takahashi; Y. Shiraishi; T. Nakagome; F. Izumi; Y. Ishii; F. Nishikawa; T. Konishi (1997). "X-ray absorption fine structure and neutron diffraction analyses of de-intercalation behavior in the LiCoO2 and LiNiO2 systems". Journal of Power Sources. 68 (2): 536–539. Bibcode:1997JPS....68..536N. doi:10.1016/S0378-7753(97)02598-6.
  6. ^ a b Shao-Horn, Yang; Croguennec, Laurence; Delmas, Claude; Nelson, E. Chris; O'Keefe, Michael A. (July 2003). "Atomic resolution of lithium ions in LiCoO
    2
    ". Nature Materials. 2 (7): 464–467. doi:10.1038/nmat922. PMID 12806387. S2CID 34357573.
  7. ^ a b H. J. Orman & P. J. Wiseman (January 1984). "Cobalt(III) lithium oxide, CoLiO
    2
    : structure refinement by powder neutron diffraction". Acta Crystallographica Section C. 40 (1): 12–14. doi:10.1107/S0108270184002833.
  8. ^ Qi, Zhaoxiang; Koenig, Gary M. (2016-08-16). "High-Performance LiCoO2Sub-Micrometer Materials from Scalable Microparticle Template Processing". ChemistrySelect. 1 (13): 3992–3999. doi:10.1002/slct.201600872. ISSN 2365-6549.
  9. ^ a b Qi, Zhaoxiang (August 2016). "High-Performance LiCoO2 Sub-Micrometer Materials from Scalable Microparticle Template Processing". ChemistrySelect. 1 (13): 3992–3999. doi:10.1002/slct.201600872.
  10. ^ a b Tang, W.; Liu, L. L.; Tian, S.; Li, L.; Yue, Y. B.; Wu, Y. P.; Guan, S. Y.; Zhu, K. (2010-11-01). "Nano-LiCoO2 as cathode material of large capacity and high rate capability for aqueous rechargeable lithium batteries". Electrochemistry Communications. 12 (11): 1524–1526. doi:10.1016/j.elecom.2010.08.024.
  11. ^ K. Mizushima, P. C. Jones, P. J. Wiseman, J. B. Goodenough (1980), "Li
    x
    CoO
    2
    (0<x<1): A New Cathode Material for Batteries of High Energy Density". Materials Research Bulletin, volume 15, pages 783–789. doi:10.1016/0025-5408(80)90012-4
  12. ^ Oswald, Stefan; Gasteiger, Hubert A. (2023-03-01). "The Structural Stability Limit of Layered Lithium Transition Metal Oxides Due to Oxygen Release at High State of Charge and Its Dependence on the Nickel Content". Journal of the Electrochemical Society. 170 (3): 030506. doi:10.1149/1945-7111/acbf80. ISSN 0013-4651. S2CID 258406065.
  13. ^ Doughty, Daniel; Pesaran, Ahmad. "Vehicle Battery Safety Roadmap Guidance" (PDF). National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  14. ^ Aurbach, D (2002-06-02). "A short review of failure mechanisms of lithium metal and lithiated graphite anodes in liquid electrolyte solutions". Solid State Ionics. 148 (3–4): 405–416. doi:10.1016/S0167-2738(02)00080-2.
  15. ^ Salagre, Elena; Segovia, Pilar; González-Barrio, Miguel Ángel; Jugovac, Matteo; Moras, Paolo; Pis, Igor; Bondino, Federica; Pearson, Justin; Wang, Richmond Shiwei; Takeuchi, Ichiro; Fuller, Elliot J.; Talin, Alec A.; Mascaraque, Arantzazu; Michel, Enrique G. (2023-08-02). "Physical Delithiation of Epitaxial LiCoO 2 Battery Cathodes as a Platform for Surface Electronic Structure Investigation". ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. 15 (30): 36224–36232. doi:10.1021/acsami.3c06147. hdl:10486/708446. ISSN 1944-8244.

External links edit

lithium, cobalt, oxide, sometimes, called, lithium, cobaltate, lithium, cobaltite, chemical, compound, with, formula, licoo2, cobalt, atoms, formally, oxidation, state, hence, iupac, name, lithium, cobalt, oxide, names, iupac, name, lithium, cobalt, oxide, oth. Lithium cobalt oxide sometimes called lithium cobaltate 2 or lithium cobaltite 3 is a chemical compound with formula LiCoO2 The cobalt atoms are formally in the 3 oxidation state hence the IUPAC name lithium cobalt III oxide Lithium cobalt oxide 1 Li Co3 O2 Names IUPAC name lithium cobalt III oxide Other names lithium cobaltite Identifiers CAS Number 12190 79 3 Y 3D model JSmol Interactive image ChemSpider 11262976 ECHA InfoCard 100 032 135 EC Number 235 362 0 PubChem CID 23670860 CompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID40893216 InChI InChI 1S Co Li 2O q 3 1 2 2Key LSZLYXRYFZOJRA UHFFFAOYSA N SMILES Li O 2 Co 3 O 2 Properties Chemical formula LiCoO2 Molar mass 97 87 g mol 1 Appearance dark blue or bluish gray crystalline solid Hazards Occupational safety and health OHS OSH Main hazards harmful GHS labelling Pictograms Signal word Danger Hazard statements H317 H350 H360 Precautionary statements P201 P202 P261 P272 P280 P281 P302 P352 P308 P313 P321 P333 P313 P363 P405 P501 Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references Lithium cobalt oxide is a dark blue or bluish gray crystalline solid 4 and is commonly used in the positive electrodes of lithium ion batteries Contents 1 Structure 2 Preparation 3 Use in rechargeable batteries 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksStructure editThe structure of LiCoO2 has been studied with numerous techniques including x ray diffraction electron microscopy neutron powder diffraction and EXAFS 5 The solid consists of layers of monovalent lithium cations Li that lie between extended anionic sheets of cobalt and oxygen atoms arranged as edge sharing octahedra with two faces parallel to the sheet plane 6 The cobalt atoms are formally in the trivalent oxidation state Co3 and are sandwiched between two layers of oxygen atoms O2 In each layer cobalt oxygen or lithium the atoms are arranged in a regular triangular lattice The lattices are offset so that the lithium atoms are farthest from the cobalt atoms and the structure repeats in the direction perpendicular to the planes every three cobalt or lithium layers The point group symmetry is R 3 m displaystyle R bar 3 m nbsp in Hermann Mauguin notation signifying a unit cell with threefold improper rotational symmetry and a mirror plane The threefold rotational axis which is normal to the layers is termed improper because the triangles of oxygen being on opposite sides of each octahedron are anti aligned 7 Preparation editFully reduced lithium cobalt oxide can be prepared by heating a stoichiometric mixture of lithium carbonate Li2 CO3 and cobalt II III oxide Co3 O4 or metallic cobalt at 600 800 C then annealing the product at 900 C for many hours all under an oxygen atmosphere 6 3 7 nbsp Nanometer sized and sub micrometer sized LCO synthesis route 8 Nanometer size particles more suitable for cathode use can also be obtained by calcination of hydrated cobalt oxalate b CoC2 O4 2H2 O in the form of rod like crystals about 8 mm long and 0 4 mm wide with lithium hydroxide LiOH up to 750 900 C 9 A third method uses lithium acetate cobalt acetate and citric acid in equal molar amounts in water solution Heating at 80 C turns the mixture into a viscous transparent gel The dried gel is then ground and heated gradually to 550 C 10 Use in rechargeable batteries editThe usefulness of lithium cobalt oxide as an intercalation electrode was discovered in 1980 by an Oxford University research group led by John B Goodenough and Tokyo University s Koichi Mizushima 11 The compound is now used as the cathode in some rechargeable lithium ion batteries with particle sizes ranging from nanometers to micrometers 10 9 During charging the cobalt is partially oxidized to the 4 state with some lithium ions moving to the electrolyte resulting in a range of compounds Lix CoO2 with 0 lt x lt 1 3 Batteries produced with LiCoO2 cathodes have very stable capacities but have lower capacities and power than those with cathodes based on especially nickel rich nickel cobalt aluminum NCA or nickel cobalt manganese NCM oxides 12 Issues with thermal stability are better for LiCoO2 cathodes than other nickel rich chemistries although not significantly This makes LiCoO2 batteries susceptible to thermal runaway in cases of abuse such as high temperature operation gt 130 C or overcharging At elevated temperatures LiCoO2 decomposition generates oxygen which then reacts with the organic electrolyte of the cell this reaction is often seen in Lithium Ion batteries where the battery becomes highly volatile and must be recycled in a safe manner The decomposition of LiCoO2 is a safety concern due to the magnitude of this highly exothermic reaction which can spread to adjacent cells or ignite nearby combustible material 13 In general this is seen for many lithium ion battery cathodes The delithiation process is usually by chemical means 14 although a novel physical process has been developed based on ion sputtering and annealing cycles 15 leaving the material properties intact See also editList of battery types Sodium cobalt oxideReferences edit 442704 Lithium cobalt III oxide 2012 09 14 Sigma Aldrich product page Sigmaaldrich com Retrieved 2013 01 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link A L Emelina M A Bykov M L Kovba B M Senyavin E V Golubina 2011 Thermochemical properties of lithium cobaltate Russian Journal of Physical Chemistry volume 85 issue 3 pages 357 363 doi 10 1134 S0036024411030071 a b c Ondrej Jankovsky Jan Kovarik Jindrich Leitner Kvetoslav Ruzicka David Sedmidubsky 2016 Thermodynamic properties of stoichiometric lithium cobaltite LiCoO2 Thermochimica Acta volume 634 pages 26 30 doi 10 1016 j tca 2016 04 018 LinYi Gelon New Battery Materials Co Ltd Lithium Cobalt Oxide LiCoO2 for lithium ion battery Catalog entry accessed on 2018 04 10 I Nakai K Takahashi Y Shiraishi T Nakagome F Izumi Y Ishii F Nishikawa T Konishi 1997 X ray absorption fine structure and neutron diffraction analyses of de intercalation behavior in the LiCoO2 and LiNiO2 systems Journal of Power Sources 68 2 536 539 Bibcode 1997JPS 68 536N doi 10 1016 S0378 7753 97 02598 6 a b Shao Horn Yang Croguennec Laurence Delmas Claude Nelson E Chris O Keefe Michael A July 2003 Atomic resolution of lithium ions in LiCoO2 Nature Materials 2 7 464 467 doi 10 1038 nmat922 PMID 12806387 S2CID 34357573 a b H J Orman amp P J Wiseman January 1984 Cobalt III lithium oxide CoLiO2 structure refinement by powder neutron diffraction Acta Crystallographica Section C 40 1 12 14 doi 10 1107 S0108270184002833 Qi Zhaoxiang Koenig Gary M 2016 08 16 High Performance LiCoO2Sub Micrometer Materials from Scalable Microparticle Template Processing ChemistrySelect 1 13 3992 3999 doi 10 1002 slct 201600872 ISSN 2365 6549 a b Qi Zhaoxiang August 2016 High Performance LiCoO2 Sub Micrometer Materials from Scalable Microparticle Template Processing ChemistrySelect 1 13 3992 3999 doi 10 1002 slct 201600872 a b Tang W Liu L L Tian S Li L Yue Y B Wu Y P Guan S Y Zhu K 2010 11 01 Nano LiCoO2 as cathode material of large capacity and high rate capability for aqueous rechargeable lithium batteries Electrochemistry Communications 12 11 1524 1526 doi 10 1016 j elecom 2010 08 024 K Mizushima P C Jones P J Wiseman J B Goodenough 1980 Lix CoO2 0 lt x lt 1 A New Cathode Material for Batteries of High Energy Density Materials Research Bulletin volume 15 pages 783 789 doi 10 1016 0025 5408 80 90012 4 Oswald Stefan Gasteiger Hubert A 2023 03 01 The Structural Stability Limit of Layered Lithium Transition Metal Oxides Due to Oxygen Release at High State of Charge and Its Dependence on the Nickel Content Journal of the Electrochemical Society 170 3 030506 doi 10 1149 1945 7111 acbf80 ISSN 0013 4651 S2CID 258406065 Doughty Daniel Pesaran Ahmad Vehicle Battery Safety Roadmap Guidance PDF National Renewable Energy Laboratory Retrieved 19 January 2013 Aurbach D 2002 06 02 A short review of failure mechanisms of lithium metal and lithiated graphite anodes in liquid electrolyte solutions Solid State Ionics 148 3 4 405 416 doi 10 1016 S0167 2738 02 00080 2 Salagre Elena Segovia Pilar Gonzalez Barrio Miguel Angel Jugovac Matteo Moras Paolo Pis Igor Bondino Federica Pearson Justin Wang Richmond Shiwei Takeuchi Ichiro Fuller Elliot J Talin Alec A Mascaraque Arantzazu Michel Enrique G 2023 08 02 Physical Delithiation of Epitaxial LiCoO 2 Battery Cathodes as a Platform for Surface Electronic Structure Investigation ACS Applied Materials amp Interfaces 15 30 36224 36232 doi 10 1021 acsami 3c06147 hdl 10486 708446 ISSN 1944 8244 External links editImaging the Structure of Lithium Cobalt Oxide at Atomic Level Archived 2008 01 13 at the Wayback Machine from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lithium cobalt oxide amp oldid 1209957343, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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