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@ARTICLE{Dck:893186,
author = {Dück, Gerald and Naqash, Sahir and Finsterbusch, Martin
and Breuer, Uwe and Guillon, Olivier and
Fattakhova-Rohlfing, Dina},
title = {{C}o-{S}intering {S}tudy of
{N}a$_{0.67}$[{N}i$_{0.1}${F}e$_{0.1}${M}n$_{0.8}$]{O}$_{2}$
and {N}a{SICON} {E}lectrolyte–{P}aving the way to {H}igh
{E}nergy {D}ensity {A}ll-{S}olid-{S}tate {B}atteries},
journal = {Frontiers in energy research},
volume = {9},
issn = {2296-598X},
address = {Lausanne},
publisher = {Frontiers Media},
reportid = {FZJ-2021-02610},
pages = {689416},
year = {2021},
abstract = {Sodium is a promising candidate for stationary storage
applications, especially when the demand for lithium-ion
batteries increases due to electromobility applications.
Even though its energy density is lower, Na-ion technology
is estimated to lead to a cost reduction of $30\%$ compared
to Li-ion technology. To improve safety as well as energy
density, Na-based all-solid-state-batteries featuring solid
electrolytes such as beta-alumina and sodium superionic
conductors and cathode materials such as Na3V2(PO4)3 and
NaxCoO2 have been developed over the past years. However,
the biggest challenge are mixed cathodes with highly
conductive interfaces, especially when co-sintering the
materials. For example, a promising sodium superionic
conductor type Na3Zr2Si2PO12 electrolyte sinters at
1,250°C, whereas the corresponding Na3V2PO12 cathode
decomposes at temperatures higher than 900°C, posing a
bottleneck. Thus in this paper, we synthesized Na0.62
[Ni0.10Fe0.10Mn0.80]O2 as cathode material for
all-solid-state sodium-ion batteries via a relatively cheap
and easy solution-assisted solid state reaction processing
route. The thermal investigations of the pure cathode
material found no degradation up to 1,260°C, making it a
perfect match for Na3.4Zr2Si2.4P0.6O12 electrolyte. In our
aim to produce a co-sintered mixed cathode, electron
microscopy investigation showed a highly dense
microstructure and the elemental mapping performed via
energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and secondary ion mass
spectrometry confirm that Na3.4Zr2Si2.4P0.6O12 and Na0.62
[Ni0.10Fe0.10Mn0.80]O2 do not react during sintering.
However, the active cathode material forms a sodium rich and
a sodium deficient phase which needs further investigation
to understand the origin and its impact on the
electrochemical performance.},
cin = {IEK-1 / JARA-ENERGY},
ddc = {333.7},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)IEK-1-20101013 / $I:(DE-82)080011_20140620$},
pnm = {131 - Electrochemical Storage (POF3-131) / 1221 -
Fundamentals and Materials (POF4-122)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-131 / G:(DE-HGF)POF4-1221},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
UT = {WOS:000663744700001},
doi = {10.3389/fenrg.2021.689416},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/893186},
}