Secondary battery and battery module, battery pack and electrical device containing the same

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 12100810
  • Patent Number
    12,100,810
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, April 18, 2024
    8 months ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 24, 2024
    2 months ago
Abstract
The present application provides a secondary battery and a battery module, battery pack and electrical device containing the same. The secondary battery comprises a positive electrode plate and an non-aqueous electrolytic solution, wherein the positive electrode plate comprises a positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure, said positive electrode active material comprising an core and a shell covering said core, said core has a chemical formula of Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4; said shell comprises a first cladding layer covering said core, a second cladding layer covering said first cladding layer and a third cladding layer covering said second cladding layer, said non-aqueous electrolytic solution comprises a first additive, said first additive comprises one or more of compounds as shown by Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

The present application belongs to the technical field of battery, in particular to a secondary battery and a battery module, a battery pack and an electrical device containing the same.


BACKGROUND

In recent years, secondary batteries have been widely used in energy storage power systems such as hydro, thermal, wind and solar power plants, as well as electric tools, electric bicycles, electric motorcycles, electric vehicles, military equipment, aerospace and many other fields. With the application and promotion of secondary batteries, their safety performances are receiving more and more attention. Lithium manganese phosphate has become one of the most popular positive electrode active materials due to its high capacity, good safety performance and abundant raw material sources, however, lithium manganese phosphate is prone to manganese ion leaching out during charging, resulting in rapid capacity decay, thereby constraining its commercialization.


SUMMARY

An object of the present application is to provide a secondary battery and a battery module, a battery pack and an electrical device containing the same, aiming to enable the secondary battery to have a relatively high energy density, and a good rate performance, cycle performance, storage performance and safety performance.


A first aspect of the present application provides a secondary battery, comprising a positive electrode plate and an non-aqueous electrolytic solution, wherein

    • the positive electrode plate comprises a positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure, in which said positive electrode active material comprises an core and a shell covering said core,
    • said core has a chemical formula of Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4, x is any value in the range of −0.100 to 0.100, y is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.500, z is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.100, said A is one or more elements selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb, and Ge, optionally one or more elements selected from Fe, Ti, V, Ni, Co and Mg, said R comprises one or more elements selected from B, Si, N and S, optionally one element selected from B, Si, N and S;
    • said x, y and z have a value satisfying such a condition that the core is electrically neutral throughout;
    • the shell comprises a first cladding layer covering the core, a second cladding layer covering the first cladding layer and a third cladding layer covering the second cladding layer,
      • said first cladding layer comprises crystalline pyrophosphate salts LiaMP2O7 and/or Mb(P2O7)c, 0≤a≤2, 1≤b≤4, 1≤c≤6, wherein said a, b, and c have an value satisfying such a condition that the crystalline pyrophosphate salts LiaMP2O7 or Mb(P2O7)c is electrically neutral; and each M in the crystalline pyrophosphate salts L LiaMP2O7 and/or Mb(P2O7)c is independently one or more elements selected from Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb, and Al, and
      • said second cladding layer comprises crystalline phosphate salts XPO4, X being one or more elements selected from Li, Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb and Al; and
      • said third cladding layer is carbon,
    • said non-aqueous electrolytic solution comprises a first additive which comprises one or more of compounds as shown by Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3,




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in which,

    • p represents 1, 2 or 3, r represents 1 or 2, s represents 1 or 2, and
    • R11 represents an oxygen atom or C(Y1)2, Y1 independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy, and
    • R12 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy, and
    • R13 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl group, C1-C6 haloalkyl group, C1-C6 alkoxy group, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy group, and
    • R21, R22, R23, R24 each independently represent a single bond or C(Y2)2, and Y2 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy, and
    • R31, R32, R33, R34 each independently represent a single bond or C(Y3)2, and Y3 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy, and
    • R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, an oxygen atom, C1-C6 alkylene, C1-C6 haloalkylene, C1-C6 oxa-alkylene.


The inventors, after extensive study, found that by modifying lithium manganese phosphate with doping and cladding lithium manganese phosphate with multiple cladding layers, it is allowed to obtain a novel positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure and the positive electrode active material is capable of achieving reduced leaching out of manganese ions and reduced lattice change rate, thereby improving rate performances, cycle performances, storage performances and safety performances of secondary batteries while increasing capacity exertion of secondary batteries.


When the non-aqueous electrolytic solution contains the first additive shown in the above Formula 1, Formula 2, and Formula 3, it is capable of forming a layer of a sulfur-containing polymer with strong lithium ion conductivity on the surface of the positive electrode active material during a charge process of the secondary battery, so as to enhance lithium ion conductivity of the positive electrode active material, and thereby further enhance capacity exertion and rate performance of the secondary battery.


In addition, the first additive can also coordinate with transition metals on the surface of the positive electrode active material and form a complex, so that interfacial film formed on the surface of the positive electrode active material is more dense and stable, thereby further reducing interfacial side reactions between the positive electrode active material and the non-aqueous electrolytic solution, further reducing leaching out of the manganese ions, and reducing gas production. Since the first additive has a high reduction potential, it can also accept electrons from a negative electrode during a charge process and reduce itself, and preferentially form a dense and stable interfacial film on the surface of the negative electrode active material over an organic solvent, thereby reducing interfacial side reactions between the negative electrode active material and the non-aqueous electrolytic solution.


Therefore, the secondary battery of the present application is capable of simultaneously combining a high energy density with a good rate performance, cycle performance, storage performance, and safety performance.


In some embodiments of the present application, said compound shown in Formula 1 satisfies at least one of the following conditions (1) to (4):

    • (1) p represents 1 or 2,
    • (2) R11 represents an oxygen atom or C(Y1)2, with Y1 independently representing one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy,
    • (3) R12 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy, and
    • (4) R13 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy.


In some embodiments of the present application, said compound shown in formula 2 satisfies at least one of the following conditions (5) to (7):

    • (5) R21, R22, R23, R24 independently represent a single bond or methylene,
    • (6) R21, R22, R23, and R24 are not all a single bond, and
    • (7) one or both of R21, R22 are methylene, and one or both of R23, R24 are methylene.


In some embodiments of the present application, said compound shown in formula 3 satisfies at least one of the following conditions (8) to (10):

    • (8) R31, R32, R33, and R34 independently represent a single bond or methylene, and R31, R32, R33, and R34 are not all a single bond,
    • (9) R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, an oxygen atom, methylene, ethylene, propylene, fluorinated methylene, fluorinated ethylene, fluorinated propylene, 2-oxa-1,3-propylene, 2-oxa-1,4-butylene, 3-oxa-1,5-pentylene, and
    • (10) R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, methylene, ethylene, propylene, 2-oxa-1,3-propylene.


In some embodiments of the present application, R31, R32, R33, R34, and R35 satisfy any one of the following conditions (1) to (6):

    • (1) R35 is a single bond, one or both of R31 and R32 are methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and
    • (2) R35 is a single bond, one or both of R33 and R34 are methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and
    • (3) R35 is a single bond, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, one of R33 and R34 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and
    • (4) R35 is a single bond, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, one of R33 and R34 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and
    • (5) R35 is a single bond, R33 and R34 are both methylene, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and
    • (6) R35 is a single bond, R31, R32, R33, R34 are all methylene.


In some embodiments of the present application, said first additive comprises at least one of the following compounds:




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With at least one of the above compounds as the first additive, it capable of forming a more dense and stable interfacial film with stronger lithium ion conductivity on the surface of the positive electrode active material, and a more dense and stable interfacial film on the surface of the negative electrode active material, and even after a long period of charge and discharge, said positive and negative electrode interfacial film are still effective in preventing active materials from coming into contact with the non-aqueous electrolytic solution, thus effectively reducing leaching out of manganese ions and reducing gas production, further improving cycle performance and storage performance of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, said first additive is present in an amount of W1% by weight, with W1 being 0.01 to 20, optionally 0.1 to 10, more optionally 0.5 to 5, based on the total weight of said non-aqueous electrolytic solution. As a result, lithium ion conductivity of the lithium manganese phosphate positive electrode active material after being encompassed by pyrophosphate can be improved without significantly increasing interfacial impedance of the positive and negative electrode, and thus the secondary battery can have a high capacity exertion and good rate performance, cycle performance and storage performance.


In some embodiments of the present application, said first cladding layer is applied in an amount of C1% by weigh, with C1 being greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 2 wt %, based on the weight of said core.


In some embodiments of the present application, said second cladding layer is applied in an amount of C2% by weight, with C2 being greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally from 2 wt % to 4 wt %, based on the weight of said core.


In some embodiments of the present application, said third cladding layer is applied in an amount of C3% by weigh, with C3 being greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 2 wt %, based on the weight of said core.


The above three cladding layers have the applied amount preferably within the above range, it is allowed to sufficiently cladding the core and at the same time further improving dynamic performance, cycle performance, storage performance and safety performance of secondary batteries without sacrificing specific capacity of the positive electrode active material.


In some embodiments of the present application, W1/(C1+C2+C3) is 0.001 to 2, optionally 0.01 to 1, and more optionally 0.05 to 1. As a result, the secondary battery is able to have a high capacity exertion and a good rate performance, cycle performance, and storage performance.


In some embodiments of the present application, the non-aqueous electrolytic solution further includes a second additive, and the second additive comprises one or more of a cyclic carbonate compound containing unsaturated bonds, a halogenated cyclic carbonate compound, a nitrile compound, a phosphonitrile compound, an aromatic hydrocarbon and halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon compound, an anhydride compound, a phosphite ester compound, a phosphate ester compound, a borate ester compound, a sulfite ester compound, a methylene disulfonate compound, and an isocyanate compound. When the non-aqueous electrolytic solution comprises both the first additive and the second additive, the second additive helps to form a more dense and stable interfacial film on the surface of the positive electrode and/or the negative electrode active material, so as to further improve at least one of cycle performance, storage performance, rate performance, and safety performance of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, the first cladding layer has a thickness of from 1 nm to 10 nm. As a result, it is allowed to avoid an unfavorable effect on the dynamic performance of the active material that may arise when the first cladding layer is too thick, and it is possible to avoid a problem that the first cladding layer may not be able to effectively hinder migration of transition metal ions when the first cladding layer is too thin.


In some embodiments of the present application, the second cladding layer has a thickness of from 2 nm to 15 nm. As a result, the second cladding layer has a stable surface structure, and side reactions with a electrolytic solution is less, so that interface side reactions can be effectively reduced, thereby improving high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries.


In some embodiments of the present application, the third cladding layer has a thickness of from 2 nm to 25 nm. As a result, it is allowed to improve an electrical conductivity of the positive electrode active material and to improve compaction density of the positive electrode plate prepared using the positive electrode active material.


In some embodiments of the present application, in said core, a ratio of y to 1−y is from 1:10 to 1:1, optionally from 1:4 to 1:1. As a result, it is allowed to further improve cycle performance and rate performance of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, in said core, a ratio of z to 1−z is from 1:9 to 1:999, optionally from 1:499 to 1:249. As a result, it is allowed to further improve cycle performance and rate performance of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, said first cladding layer contains crystalline pyrophosphate salts having a crystal plane spacing of 0.293 nm to 0.470 nm, and a crystal orientation (111) angle of 18.00° to 32.00°.


In some embodiments of the present application, said second cladding layer contains crystalline phosphate salts having a crystal plane spacing of 0.244 nm to 0.425 nm, and a crystal orientation (111) angle of from 20.000 to 37.00°.


The above crystalline pyrophosphate salts and crystalline phosphate salts having the above crystal plane spacing and crystal orientation angle can effectively inhibit lattice change rate and leaching out of manganese ions during the de-inercalation and intercalation of lithium, thereby improving high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, the carbon of the third cladding layer is a mixture of SP2 carbon and SP3 carbon, optionally, a molar ratio of the SP2 carbon to SP3 carbon is any value in the range of 0.1 to 10, optionally any value in the range of 2.0 to 3.0. In the present application, a comprehensive performance of the secondary battery is improved by defining the molar ratio of SP2 carbon to SP3 carbon as to be within the above range.


In some embodiments of the present application, manganese is present in a content in the range of from 10 wt % to 35 wt %, optionally in the range of from 15 wt % to 30 wt %, and more optionally in the range of from 17 wt % to 20 wt %, based on the weight of the positive electrode active material. Thus, it is possible to effectively avoid problems such as poor structural stability of the positive electrode active material and density decline that may be caused if the content of manganese element is too large, so as to improve performances of the secondary battery in terms of cycle, storage, and compaction density, and the like. In addition, it is also possible to avoid problems such as low voltage plateau that may be caused if the content of manganese element is too small, so as to improve energy density of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, phosphorus is present in a content in the range of from 12 wt % to 25 wt %, optionally in the range of from 15 wt % to 20 wt %, based on the weight of the positive electrode active material. Thus, the following can be effectively avoided: if the content of the elemental phosphorus is too high, it may cause covalency of P—O to be too strong and affect conductivity of small polarons, thereby affecting electrical conductivity of the positive electrode active material; if the content of the elemental phosphorus is too small, it is possible to enable lattice structure of the pyrophosphate salts in the core and in the first cladding layer, and/or the phosphate salts in the second cladding layer to be less stable, thereby affecting overall stability of the positive electrode active material.


In some embodiments of the present application, a weight ratio of manganese to phosphorus is in the range of 0.90 to 1.25, optionally in the range of 0.95 to 1.20, based on the weight of the positive electrode active material. Thus, the following can be effectively avoided: if the weight ratio is too large, it is possible to lead to an increase in leaching out of manganese ions, and to affect stability of the positive electrode active material and cycle performance and storage performance of the secondary battery; if the weight ratio is too small, it is possible to cause a decrease in a discharge voltage plateau, thereby resulting in a decrease in energy density of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, the positive electrode active material has a lattice change rate of 4% or less, optionally 3.8% or less, more optionally from 2.0% to 3.8% before and after complete de-intercalation and intercalation of lithium. As a result, the positive electrode active material can improve capacity exertion and rate performance of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, the positive electrode active material has a Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration of 4% or less, optionally 2.2% or less, more optionally from 1.5% to 2.2%. By having the Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration within the above range, it is possible to avoid the result of Mn2+ hindering Li+ transport, and at the same time enhance capacity exertion and rate performance of the positive electrode active material.


In some embodiments of the present application, the positive electrode active material has a compaction density of 2.2 g/cm3 or more, optionally 2.2 g/cm3 or more and 2.8 g/cm3 or less, at 3 T. Thus, it is beneficial to improving volumetric energy density of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, the positive electrode active material has a surface oxygen valence of −1.82 or less, optionally −1.89 to −1.98. Thereby, by limiting the surface oxygen valence of the positive electrode active material to the above range as described above, it is possible to alleviate interfacial side reactions of the positive electrode active material and an electrolytic solution, thereby improving cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance and the like of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments of the present application, the positive electrode active material has a specific surface area of B in m2/g, with B being in the range of 7 to 18, optionally 10 to 15. As a result, it is allowed to ensure that the positive electrode plate has a high lithium ion conductivity, while the secondary battery has good rate performance, cycle performance and storage performance.


A second aspect of the present application provides a battery module, comprising the secondary battery according to the first aspect of the present application.


A third aspect of the present application provides a battery pack, comprising the battery module according to the second aspect of the present application.


A fourth aspect of the present application provides an electrical device comprising at least one of the secondary battery of the first aspect of the present application, the battery module of the second aspect of the present application or the battery pack of the third aspect of the present application.


The battery module, battery pack and electrical device include the secondary battery of the present application, and thus have at least the same advantages as said secondary battery.





DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

In order to explain the technical solutions of the embodiments of the present application more clearly, the following will briefly introduce the drawings that need to be used in the embodiments of the present application. Apparently, the drawings described below are only some embodiments of the present application. A person skilled in the art can obtain other drawings based on the accompanying drawings without creative work.



FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a secondary battery according to an embodiment of the present application.



FIG. 2 is an exploded view of a secondary battery according to the embodiment of the present application as shown in FIG. 1.



FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of a battery module according to an embodiment of the present application.



FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of a battery pack according to an embodiment of the present application.



FIG. 5 is an exploded view of the battery pack according to the embodiment of the present application as shown in FIG. 4.



FIG. 6 is a schematic diagram of an electrical device according to an embodiment of the present application using the secondary battery of the present application as power.





In the drawings, the accompanying drawings are not necessarily drawn to an actual scale. Among them, the reference sings in the accompanying drawings are illustrated as follows: 1—battery pack, 2—upper case, 3—lower case, 4—battery module, 5—secondary battery, 51—housing, 52—electrode assembly, and 53—cover plate.


DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Hereinafter, embodiments of the secondary battery and the battery module, the battery pack and the electrical device containing the same will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings as appropriate. However, unnecessary detailed descriptions may be omitted in some cases, for example the detailed description of a well-known item or the repetitive description of an actually identical structure, so as to prevent the following description from becoming unnecessarily redundant and to facilitate understanding by those skilled in the art. In addition, the drawings and the following description are provided for those skilled in the art to fully understand the present application, and are not intended to limit the subject matter described in the claims.


The “range(s)” disclosed in this application is/are defined in the form of lower and upper limits, and a given range is defined by selection of a lower limit and an upper limit that define boundary of the particular range. Ranges defined in this manner may or may not be inclusive of the endpoints, and may be arbitrarily combined. That is, any lower limit may be combined with any upper limit to form a range. For example, if the ranges of 60-120 and 80-110 are listed for a particular parameter, it is to be understood that the ranges of 60-110 and 80-120 are also contemplated. Additionally, if the minimum range values 1 and 2 are listed, and the maximum range values 3, 4, and 5 are listed, the following ranges are all expected: 1-3, 1-4, 1-5, 2-3, 2-4 and 2-5. In the present application, unless stated otherwise, the numerical range “a-b” represents an abbreviated representation of any combination of real numbers between a and b, where both a and b are real numbers. For example, the numerical range “0-5” means that all real numbers between “0-5” have been listed herein, and the range “0-5” is just an abbreviated representation of the combination of these numerical values. In addition, when a parameter is expressed as an integer greater than or equal to 2, it is equivalent to disclose that the parameter is, for example, an integer of 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and the like.


Unless stated otherwise, all the embodiments and the optional embodiments of the present application can be combined with each other to form a new technical solution, and such technical solution should be considered to be included in the disclosure of the present application.


Unless stated otherwise, all technical features and optional technical features of the present application can be combined with each other to form a new technical solution, and such technical solution should be considered to be included in the disclosure of the present application.


Unless stated otherwise, all steps of the present application can be carried out sequentially, and also can be carried out randomly, preferably they are carried out sequentially. For example, the method includes steps (a) and (b), indicating that the method may include steps (a) and (b) performed in sequence, or that the method may include steps (b) and (a) performed in sequence. For example, reference to the method further comprising step (c) indicates that step (c) may be added to the method in any order. As an example, the method may comprises steps (a), (b) and (c), steps (a), (c) and (b), or steps (c), (a) and (b), and the like.


Unless stated otherwise, the transition phases “comprise”, “comprising”, “contain” and “containing” mentioned in the present application mean that it is drafted in an open mode, or it may also mean a close mode. For example, the transition phases “comprise”, “comprising”, “contain” and “containing” may mean that other components not listed may also be included or contained, or only the listed components may be included or contained.


In the present application herein, unless otherwise stated, the term “or” is inclusive. For example, the phrase “A or B” means “A, B, or both A and B”. More specifically, any of the following conditions meets “A or B”: A is true (or present) and B is false (or absent); A is false (or absent) and B is true (or present); or both A and B are true (or present).


It shall note that as used herein, the term “cladding layer” refers to a layer of material covering a lithium manganese phosphate core, and said layer of material may completely or partially cover the core. Use of the term “cladding layer” is used only for convenience of description and is not intended to limit the present invention. Alternatively, each cladding layer may completely or partially cover the underlying layer. Similarly, the term “thickness of the cladding layer” refers to a thickness of said material layer that is covered on a lithium manganese phosphate core in a radial direction of the lithium manganese phosphate core.


As used herein, the term “median particle size Dv50” is a particle size at which a cumulative volume distribution percentage of a material reaches to 50%. In the present application, the median particle size Dv50 of a material may be determined using a laser diffraction particle size analysis. For example, with reference to standard GB/T 19077-2016, it is determined using a laser particle size analyzer (e.g., Malvern Master Size 3000).


As used herein, an “approximate” value indicates a range of that the specified value±10%.


As used herein, the terms “a plurality of”, and “more” mean two or more.


As used herein, the term “alkyl” refers to a saturated hydrocarbon group, including both straight chain and branched chain structures. Examples of alkyl include, without being limited to, methyl, ethyl, propyl (e.g., n-propyl, isopropyl), butyl (e.g., n-butyl, iso-butyl, sec-butyl, tert-butyl), and pentyl (e.g., n-pentyl, iso-pentyl, neopentyl). In various embodiments, C1-C6 alkyl group is an alkyl group containing from 1 to 6 carbon atoms.


As used herein, the term “haloalkyl” refers to a group obtained by substituting at least one hydrogen atom in an alkyl group with a halogen atom. The number of halogen atoms in the haloalkyl may be one or more. When more than one halogen atoms are present in the haloalkyl, these halogen atoms may be the same or different.


As used herein, the term “alkoxy” refers to an alkyl group containing an oxygen atom (—O—). Examples of alkoxy include, without being limited to, methoxy, ethoxy, or propoxy. In various embodiments, C1-C6 alkoxy is an alkoxy containing 1 to 6 carbon atoms.


As used herein, the term “haloalkoxy” refers to a group obtained by substituting at least one hydrogen atom in an alkoxy group with a halogen atom. The number of halogen atoms in the haloalkoxy may be one or more. When more than one halogen atoms are present in the haloalkoxy, the halogen atoms may be the same or different.


As used herein, a group with the suffix “ene” indicates that the group is an organic divalent functional group. That is, it indicates the group remaining after an organic compound corresponding to the group lose two hydrogen atoms.


As used herein, the term “oxa-alkylene” represents a group obtained by replacement of at least one carbon atom in an alkylene group by an oxygen atom. The number of oxygen atoms in an oxa-alkylene group may be one or more. Examples of oxa-alkylene include, without being limited to, 2-oxa-1,3-propylene (—CH2—O—CH2—), 2-oxa-1,4-butylene (—CH2—O—CH2CH2—), and 3-oxa-1,5-pentylene (—CH2CH2—O—CH2CH2—). In various embodiments, C1-C6 oxa-alkylene is an oxa-alkylene containing from 1 to 6 carbon atoms.


For purposes herein, a halogen atom are a fluorine atom, a chlorine atom, a bromine atom, and an iodine atom. Optionally, the halogen atom is a fluorine atom.


As used herein, substituents of compounds are disclosed as groups or ranges. It is explicitly expected that such a description includes each individual subcombination of members of these groups and ranges. For example, the term “C1-C6 alkyl group” is explicitly expected to disclose C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6, C1-C6, C1-C5, C1-C4, C1-C3, C1-C2, C2-C6, C2-C5, C2-C4, C1-C3, C1-C2, C3-C6, C3-C5, C3-C4, C4-C6, C4-C5, C5-C6, alkyl groups.


The inventors of the present application found in an actual operation that leaching out of manganese ions is serious during deep charging and discharging of a currently existing lithium manganese phosphate positive electrode active material. Although the prior art have attempted to clad the lithium manganese phosphate with lithium iron phosphate to reduce interfacial side reactions, such a cladding cannot prevent the leached-out manganese ions from further migrating into a non-aqueous electrolytic solution. The leached-out manganese ions are reduced to metal manganese after migration to a negative electrode. The as-produced metal manganese is equivalent to a “catalyst”, which can catalyze decomposition of SEI (solid electrolyte interphase) film on the surface of the negative electrode to produce a by-product. One part of the by-product is gas, which is prone to cause the secondary battery to expand and affect safety performance of the secondary battery, and the other part of the by-product is deposited on the surface of the negative electrode, and blocks channel of lithium ions in and out of the negative electrode, resulting in an increased impedance of the battery and negatively affecting dynamic performance of the battery. In addition, in order to supplement the decomposed SEI film, the non-aqueous electrolytic solution and active lithium ions in the battery are continuously consumed, which has an irreversible impact on capacity retention rate of the battery.


The inventor, after thorough consideration on a positive electrode and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution, has designed a secondary battery capable of simultaneously combining a high energy density with good rate performance, cycle performance, storage performance and safety performance.


Specifically, a first aspect of the present application provides a secondary battery.


Secondary Battery


A secondary battery, also known as a rechargeable battery or accumulator, is a battery that can continue to be used by activating its active material by means of charging after the battery has been discharged. Typically, a secondary battery includes an electrode assembly and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution, and the electrode assembly includes a positive electrode plate, a negative electrode plate, and a separator. The separator is disposed between the positive electrode plate and the negative electrode plate, which mainly functions to prevent short circuit of the positive and negative electrodes while allowing lithium ions to pass through. The non-aqueous electrolytic solution functions as conducting active ions between the positive electrode plate and the negative electrode plate.


[Positive Electrode Plate]


The secondary battery of the present application adopts a positive electrode plate comprising a positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure wherein said positive electrode active material comprises a core and a shell cladding said core.


The core has a chemical formula of Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4, wherein x is any value in the range of −0.100 to 0.100, y is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.500, z is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.100, A is one or more elements selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb, and Ge, optionally one or more elements selected from Fe, Ti, V, Ni, Co and Mg, said R comprises one or more elements selected from B, Si, N and S, optionally one element selected from B, Si, N and S; said x, y and z have a value satisfying such a condition that the core is electrically neutral throughout.


The shell comprises a first cladding layer covering the core, a second cladding layer covering the first cladding layer and a third cladding layer covering the second cladding layer. The first cladding layer comprises crystalline pyrophosphate salts LiaMP2O7 and/or M(P2O7)c, 0≤a≤2, 1≤b≤4, 1≤c≤6, wherein a, b, and c have an value satisfying such a condition that the crystalline pyrophosphate salts LiaMP2O7 or Mb(P2O7)c are electrically neutral; and each M in the crystalline pyrophosphate salts LiaMP2O7 and/or Mb(P2O7)c is independently one or more elements selected from Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb, and Al. The second cladding layer comprises crystalline phosphate salts XPO4, X being one or more elements selected from Li, Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb and Al. The third cladding layer is carbon,


Unless otherwise stated, in the above chemical formula, when A represents more than two elements, the above range for the y value is not only for the stoichiometric number of each element as A, but also for the sum of the stoichiometric numbers of each element as A. For example, when A represents more than two elements A1, A2 . . . and An, each of the respective stoichiometric numbers y1, y2 . . . and yn of respective A1, A2 . . . and An must fall within the numerical range defined by the present application for y, and the sum of y1, y2 . . . and yn must also fall within such numerical range of the present application. Similarly, in the case where R is more than two elements, the limitations on numerical ranges for the stoichiometric numbers of R in the present application also have the above meaning.


In an optional embodiment, when A is one, two, three, or four elements selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb, and Ge, Ay is Qn1Dn2En3Kn4, with n1+n2+n3+n4=y and n1, n2, n3, and n4 being a positive number and not simultaneously 0, and Q, D, E, and K are each independently one selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb, and Ge, optionally at least one of Q, D, E, and K is Fe. Optionally, one of n1, n2, n3, and n4 is zero, and the rest are not zero; and more optionally, two of n1, n2, n3 and n4 are zero and the rest are not zero; more optionally, three of n1, n2, n3 and n4 are zero and the rest are not zero. In the core of Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4, it is advantageous to dope one, two, three or four of the A elements at the manganese site, and optionally, to dope one, two or three of the A elements; furthermore, it is advantageous to dope one or two of the R elements at the phosphorus site, which facilitates a uniform distribution of dopant elements.


In the core of Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4, the magnitude of x is affected by the size of valence states of A and R, and the magnitude of y and z, to ensure that the whole system exhibits electroneutrality. If the value of x is too small, it will lead to a lower lithium content in the whole core system, affecting capacity exertion of the positive electrode active material. The value of y will limit the total amount of all the dopant elements, and if y is too small, i.e., the amount of doping is too small, the dopant elements cannot work, and if y is more than 0.5, it will lead to a lower content of Mn in the system, affecting voltage plateau of the material. The R element is doped at the position of P since the P—O tetrahedron is relatively stable, and if the value of z is too large, the stability of the material will be affected, thus the value of z is limited to 0.001 to 0.100.


The inventors, after extensive study, found that by modifying lithium manganese phosphate with doping and cladding lithium manganese phosphate with multiple cladding layers, it is allowed to obtain a novel positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure and the positive electrode active material is capable of achieving reduced leaching out of manganese ions and reduced lattice change rate, thereby improving rate performances, cycle performances, storage performances and safety performances of secondary batteries while increasing capacity exertion of secondary batteries.


Although the mechanism is not clear, it is presumed that by doping a lithium manganese phosphate core with element A and element R at the manganese and phosphorus sites, respectively, not only is it possible to effectively reduce leaching out of manganese ions, and thus reduce manganese ions migrating to the negative electrode, and reduce consumption of an electrolytic solution caused by decomposition of a SEI membrane, thereby improving cycle performance and safety performance of secondary batteries, but also it is possible to promote adjustment of Mn—O bond, to lower migration barrier of lithium ions, and to promote migration of lithium ions, thereby improving rate performance of secondary batteries; and that by cladding the core with a first cladding layer comprising crystalline pyrophosphate salts, it is allowed to further increase migration resistance of manganese ions, to reduce leaching out of manganese ions, and to reduce the content of surface hetero-lithium and the contact between the core and an electrolytic solution, thus reducing interfacial side reactions, reducing gas production, and improving high-temperature storage performance, cycle performance and safety performance of secondary batteries; by further cladding with a crystalline phosphate cladding layer with an excellent lithium ion conductivity, it is allowed to effectively reduce interfacial side reactions between the positive electrode active material and an electrolytic solution, and to in turn improve high-temperature cycle and storage performances of secondary batteries; and by further cladding with a carbon layer as a third cladding layer, it is allowed to further improve safety performance and dynamic performance of secondary batteries.


In addition, in the core, the dopant element A doped at a manganese site of the lithium manganese phosphate also helps to reduce lattice change rate of lithium manganese phosphate in the process of de-intercalation and intercalation of lithium in this material, and improve structural stability of the lithium manganese phosphate positive electrode active material, thereby greatly reducing leaching out of manganese ions and reduce oxygen activity on the surface of the particles; and the dopant element R doped at a phosphorus site also helps to change the difficulty of the Mn—O bond length change, thereby improving electronic conductivity and reducing migration barrier of lithium ions, promoting migration of lithium ions, and improving rate performance of secondary batteries.


In addition, the entire core system remains electrically neutral, which ensures that there are as few defects and heterogeneous phases in the positive electrode active material as possible. If there is an excessive amount of transition metal (e.g., manganese) in the positive electrode active material, the excess transition metal is likely to precipitate in the form of elemental substance or form a heterogeneous phase inside a crystal lattice of the material since the material system itself has a relatively stable structure, remaining electrically neutral enables such heterogeneous phases as small as possible. Additionally, the system remaining electrically neutral can also lead to creation of lithium vacancies in the positive electrode active material in some cases, which can lead to better dynamic performance of the positive electrode active material.


The core prepared in the present application has an average particle size ranging from 50 nm to 500 nm, and a medium particle size Dv50 ranging from 200 nm to 300 nm. The core has a primary particle size ranging from 50 nm to 500 nm, and has a medium particle size Dv50 ranging from 200 nm to 300 nm. If the average particle size of the core is too large (more than 500 nm), capacity exertion of the secondary batteries using the material will be affected; if the average particle size of the core is too small, the core has a large specific surface area and is prone to agglomeration, making it difficult to be uniform coated.


Through a process management (e.g., sufficient mixing and grinding of materials as various sources), it is possible to ensure that elements are uniformly distributed in a crystal lattice without agglomeration. Lithium manganese phosphate doped with element A and element R has a X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern whose primary characteristic peaks have positions consistent with those of un-doped LiMnPO4, indicating that no impurity phases are introduced in the doping process, and thus improvement of performances of the core is mainly from element doping rather than impurity phase. After preparing the positive electrode active material according to the present application, the inventors cut a middle region (an inner core region) of the prepared positive electrode active material particles by a focused ion beam (referred to as FIB), and tested it by a transmission electron microscope (referred to as TEM) as well as an X-ray energy spectrum analysis (referred to as EDS), and found that distribution of various elements was uniform, and that no aggregation occurs.


In the present application, “crystalline” means having a degree of crystallinity of 50% or more, i.e., 50% to 100%. A crystallinity of less than 50% is referred to as the glassy (or amorphous) state. The crystalline pyrophosphate salts and crystalline phosphate salts described in the present application have a crystallinity of 50% to 100%. Pyrophosphate salts and phosphate salts with a certain degree of crystallinity are not only conducive to exerting the function of the pyrophosphate cladding layer in hindering leaching out of manganese ions and the excellent lithium ions conductivity of the phosphate cladding layer, and to reducing interfacial side reactions, but also enable the pyrophosphate cladding layer and the phosphate cladding layer to lattice match well, thereby achieving a closer bonding of the cladding layers.


In the present application, the crystallinity of crystalline pyrophosphate salts as materials for the first cladding layer and crystalline phosphate salts as material for the second cladding layer of the positive electrode active material can be tested by conventional technical means in the field, for example, by density method, infrared spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, and nuclear magnetic resonance absorption method, and can also be tested, for example, by X-ray diffraction method.


A specific method for testing the crystallinity of crystalline pyrophosphate salts as materials for the first cladding layer and crystalline phosphate salts as materials for the second cladding layer of the positive electrode active material by an X-ray diffraction method may comprise the steps of taking a certain amount of the positive electrode active material powder and measuring a total scattering intensity by X-rays, which is the sum of scattering intensities of substances in the entire space, and is only related to intensity of primary rays, a chemical structure of the positive electrode active material powder, and the total number (i.e., mass) of electrons participating in diffraction, and not with an ordinal state of the sample; and then separating a crystalline scattering from an amorphous scattering in the diffraction pattern, to determine a degree of crystallinity, i.e., a ratio of scattering of the crystalline portion to the total scattering intensity.


It should be noted that in the present application, crystallinity of the pyrophosphate salts and phosphate salts in the cladding layer can be adjusted, for example, by adjusting process conditions of a sintering process such as temperature, period and the like for the sintering.


In the present application, since metal ions are difficult to migrate in pyrophosphate salts, the pyrophosphate salts as a first cladding layer can effectively isolate doping metal ions from a non-aqueous electrolytic solution. Crystalline pyrophosphate salts have a stable structure, thus a cladding layer of the crystalline pyrophosphate salts can effectively inhibit leaching out of transition metal ions and improve cycle performance of secondary batteries.


The bonding between the first cladding layer and the core is similar to a heterojunction, the firmness of which is limited by a lattice matching degree. When a lattice mismatching degree is below 5%, better lattice matching occurs, and the two materials are easy to bind tightly. The tight bonding can ensure that a cladding layer will not fall off in the subsequent cycle process, which is conducive to enabling the positive electrode active material to have a long-term stability. The bonding between the first cladding layer and the core is measured mainly by calculating a lattice mismatching degree between the core and the respective lattice constant in the cladding layer. In the present application, by doping the core with elements A and R, the core has an improved matching degree with the first cladding layer and the core can bind the pyrophosphate salts cladding layer more tightly, as compared to an un-doped core.


The crystalline phosphate salts are chosen as a second cladding layer for the following reasons. Firstly, it has a higher lattice matching degree with the crystalline pyrophosphate salts in the first cladding layer, with only 3% of the lattice mismatching degree between them. Secondly, the phosphate salts per se have a better stability than the pyrophosphate salts, and cladding the pyrophosphate salts with it is conducive to improvement of stability of the positive electrode active material. The structure of crystalline phosphate salts is very stable, and thus they have excellent conductivity of lithium ions, so the use of crystalline phosphate salts for covering can effectively reduce interfacial side reactions between the positive electrode active material and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution, thus improving high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries. The lattice matching degree between the second cladding layer and the first cladding layer, among other things, is similar to the lattice matching degree between of the first cladding layer and the core as described above, and when a lattice mismatching degree is less than 5%, better lattice matching occurs, and the two materials are easy to be bonded tightly.


The main reason for carbon as a third cladding layer is that the carbon layer has a better electronic conductivity. Since electrochemical reactions occur when applied in secondary batteries, requiring participation of electrons, carbon with excellent electrical conductivity can be used to cover the positive electrode active material in order to increase electron transfer between particles and at different locations on particles. Cladding with carbon can effectively improve electrical conductivity and desolventization of the positive electrode active material.


In some embodiments, primary particles of the positive electrode active material have an average particle size in the range of 50 nm to 500 nm, with a volume median particle size Dv50 in the range of 200 nm to 300 nm. Since the particles will agglomerate, the actual measured size of the secondary particles after agglomeration may be from 500 nm to 40,000 nm. The size of particles of the positive electrode active material affects processing of the material and compaction density of the electrode plate. By selecting the average particle size of primary particles to be within the above range, it is thereby possible to effectively avoid the following: if the average particle size of primary particles of the positive electrode active material is too small, it is possible to cause agglomeration of particles and make the particles difficult to be dispersed, and thus a higher amount of binder is required, resulting in a worse brittleness of the electrode plate; if the average particle size of primary particles of the positive electrode active material is too large, it is possible to result in larger gaps among particles and a lower compaction density.


By the above-described scheme, it is allowed to effectively suppress lattice change rate of lithium manganese phosphate and leaching out of manganese ions in the process of de-intercalation and intercalation of lithium, thereby enhancing high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries.


In some embodiments, the crystalline pyrophosphate salts in the first cladding layer have a crystal plane spacing ranging from 0.293 nm to 0.470 nm, and a crystal orientation (111) angle of 18.00° to 32.00°; the crystalline phosphate salts in the second cladding layer have a crystal plane spacing ranging from 0.244 nm to 0.425 nm, and a crystal orientation (111) angle of 20.00° to 37.00°.


Both the first cladding layer and the second cladding layer in the positive electrode active material described in the present application contain crystalline substances. The crystalline pyrophosphate salts and crystalline phosphate salts in a cladding layer can be characterized by means of techniques that are conventional in the art, alternatively can be characterized for example, with the aid of transmission electron microscopy (TEM). With TEM, the core and the cladding layers can be distinguished by testing a crystal plane spacing.


The specific test method for the crystal plane spacing and crystal orientation angle of crystalline pyrophosphate salts and crystalline phosphate salts in cladding layers may include the following steps. A certain amount of the positive electrode active material powder with cladding layers was placed in a test tube, to which a solvent, such as alcohol is injected, and then it was subjected to sufficient stirring and dispersion. And then an appropriate amount of the above solution is dropped on a 300-mesh copper mesh with a clean disposable plastic pipette. At this time, some of the powder would be left on the copper mesh, and then the copper mesh with samples would be transferred to a TEM sample chamber for testing, thereby obtaining original images of TEM testing. The original TEM images are opened in a diffractometer software and subjected to Fourier transform to get a diffraction pattern, the distance from the diffracted spot to the center of diffraction pattern is measured to get a crystal plane spacing, and the orientation angle was calculated according to the Bragg's equation.


The crystal plane spacing of crystalline pyrophosphate salts is different from that of crystalline phosphate salts, and these two salts may be directly judged by the value of crystal plane spacing.


Crystalline pyrophosphate salts and crystalline phosphate salts having a crystal plane spacing and an orientation angle within the above range can more effectively inhibit lattice change rate of lithium manganese phosphate and leaching out of manganese ions in the process of de-intercalation and intercalation of lithium, thereby enhancing high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries.


In some embodiments, in the core, a ratio of y to (1−y) is from 1:10 to 1:1, optionally from 1:4 to 1:1. Herein y denotes the sum of stoichiometric numbers of the Mn-site doping element A. The energy density and cycle performance of secondary batteries using the positive electrode active material may be further improved when the above condition is met.


In some embodiments, in the core, the ratio of z to (1−z) is from 1:9 to 1:999, optionally from 1:499 to 1:249. Herein z denotes the sum of stoichiometric numbers of the P-site doping element R. The energy density and cycle performance of secondary batteries using the positive electrode active material may be further improved when the above conditions are met.


In some embodiments, the carbon of the third cladding layer is a mixture of SP2 carbon and SP3 carbon; optionally, a molar ratio of the SP2 carbon to the SP3 carbon is any value in the range of 0.1 to 10, optionally any value in the range of 2.0 to 3.0.


In some embodiments, a molar ratio of the SP2 carbon to the SP3 carbon may be about 0.1, about 0.2, about 03, about 0.4, about 0.5, about 0.6, about 0.7, about 0.8, about 0.9, about 1, about 2, about 3, about 4, about 5, about 6, about 7, about 8, about 9, or about 10, or any value within any of the foregoing ranges.


By selecting morphology of the carbon in the carbon cladding layer, it is allowed to enhance an overall electrochemical performance of secondary batteries. Specifically, by using a mixed SP2 and SP3 morphology of carbon and limiting a ratio of the SP2 carbon to the SP3 carbon to a certain range, the following can be effectively avoided: if all of the carbon in the cladding layer is in the morphology of amorphous SP3, its electrical conductivity is poor, and if all of the carbon in the cladding layer is in the morphology of graphitized SP2, it is conducive to intercalation and de-intercalation of lithium ions since it has few lithium-ion pathways although its electrical conductivity is good. In addition, limiting a molar ratio of the SP2 carbon to the SP3 carbon to the above range achieves good electrical conductivity and ensures the lithium ion pathway, and is therefore conducive to improving the dynamic performance and cycle performance of secondary batteries.


The mixing ratio of the SP2 form and the SP3 form of carbon for the third cladding layer can be controlled by sintering conditions such as sintering temperature and sintering time. For example, in the case where sucrose is used as a carbon source to prepare a third cladding layer, the sucrose is decomposed at a high temperature and then deposited on a second cladding layer meanwhile a carbon cladding layer with both the SP3 form and the SP2 form is produced under the action of high temperature. The ratio of the SP2 carbon to the SP3 carbon may be regulated by selecting the high temperature decomposition conditions and the sintering conditions.


The structure and characterization of carbon in the third cladding layer can be determined by Raman (Raman) spectroscopy. The particular measurement comprises the following steps of splitting energy spectrum from the Raman test to obtain Id/Ig in which Id is a peak intensity of the carbon in the SP3 form and Ig is a peak intensity of the carbon in the SP2 form and then determining a molar ratio of the SP2 carbon to the SP3 carbon.


In some embodiments, the first cladding layer is applied in an amount of C1% by weight, with C1 being greater than 0 and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally greater than 0 and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally greater than 0 and less than or equal to 2 wt %, based on the weight of the core.


In some embodiments, the second cladding layer is applied in an amount of C2% by weight, with C2 being greater than 0 and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally greater than 0 and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, and more optionally between 2 wt % and 4 wt %, based on the weight of the core.


In some embodiments, the third cladding layer is applied in an amount of C3% by weight, with C3 being greater than 0 and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally greater than 0 and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally greater than 0 and less than or equal to 2 wt %, based on the weight of the core.


In the present application, each of the cladding layers is applied in an amount greater than zero.


In the positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure described in the present application, the applied amounts of the three cladding layers are preferably within the above ranges, whereby the core can be sufficiently coated and at the same time it is allowed to further improve the dynamic performance, cycle performance, storage performance and safety performance of secondary batteries without sacrificing specific capacity of the positive electrode active material.


For the first cladding layer, by controlling the applied amount within the above range, the following situations can be effectively avoided: if the applied amount is too small, the cladding layer has a relatively thin thickness, which may not be able to effectively impede migration of transition metals; if the applied amount is too large, the cladding layer is too thick, which may affect migration of Li+, and thus affect rate performance of secondary batteries.


For the second cladding layer, by controlling the applied amount within the above range, the following situations can be effectively avoided: if the applied amount is too much, it is possible to affect an overall platform voltage of the positive electrode active material; if the applied amount is too little, it is impossible to realize a sufficient cladding effect.


For the third cladding layer, the cladding of carbon mainly serves to enhance electron transfer between particles. Nevertheless, since there is a large amount of amorphous carbon in the cladding structure, which carbon has a relatively low density, compaction density of the electrode plate containing the cladding layer may be affected if the applied amount is too large.


In some embodiments, the first cladding layer has a thickness of 1 nm to 10 nm.


In some embodiments, the second cladding layer has a thickness of 2 nm to 15 nm.


In some embodiments, the third cladding layer has a thickness of 2 nm to 25 nm.


In some embodiments, the thickness of the first cladding layer may be about 2 nm, about 3 nm, about 4 nm, about 5 nm, about 6 nm, about 7 nm, about 8 nm, about 9 nm, or about 10 nm, or in any range of any of the above values.


In some embodiments, the thickness of the second cladding layer may be about 2 nm, about 3 nm, about 4 nm, about 5 nm, about 6 nm, about 7 nm, about 8 nm, about 9 nm, about 10 nm, about 11 nm, about 12 nm, about 13 nm, about 14 nm, about 15 nm, or in any range of any of the above values.


In some embodiments, the thickness of the third cladding layer may be about 2 nm, about 3 nm, about 4 nm, about 5 nm, about 6 nm, about 7 nm, about 8 nm, about 9 nm, about 10 nm, about 11 nm, about 12 nm, about 13 nm, about 14 nm, about 15 nm, about 16 nm, about 17 nm, about 18 nm, about 19 nm, about 20 nm, about 21 nm, about 22 nm, about 23 nm, about 24 nm, or about 25 nm, or in any range of any of the above values.


When the thickness of the first cladding layer is within the range of 1 nm to 10 nm, it is possible to avoid an unfavorable effect on the dynamic performance of the positive electrode active material that may arise when it is too thick, and it is possible to avoid a problem that the cladding layer may not be able to efficiently hinder migration of transition metal ions when it is too thin.


When the thickness of the second cladding layer is within the range of 2 nm to 15 nm, the second cladding layer has a stable surface structure, and its side reactions with a non-aqueous electrolytic solution is less, and thus the interfacial side reactions can be effectively mitigated, thereby improving high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries.


When the thickness of the third cladding layer is within the range of 2 nm to 25 nm, electrical conductivity of the positive electrode active material can be improved and compaction density of a positive electrode plate prepared using the positive electrode active material can be improved.


The test for the thickness of these cladding layers is mainly carried out by FIB, and the specific method may comprise the following steps: randomly selecting an individual particle from the positive electrode active material powder to be tested, cutting a thin slice with a thickness of about 100 nm from the selected particle at its middle position or at a position close to its middle portion, and then carrying out a TEM test on the thin slice, from which the thickness of the respective cladding layers is measured at 3-5 positions, and the average value is taken.


In some embodiments, the content of manganese is in the range of 10 wt % to 35 wt %, optionally in the range of 15 wt % to 30 wt %, and more optionally in the range of 17 wt % to 20 wt %, based on the weight of the positive electrode active material.


In some embodiments, the content of phosphorus is in the range of 12 wt % to 25 wt %, optionally in the range of 15 wt % to 20 wt %, based on the weight of the positive electrode active material.


In some embodiments, a weight ratio of manganese to phosphorus is in the range of 0.90 to 1.25, optionally in the range of 0.95 to 1.20.


In the present application, where only the core of the positive electrode active material contains manganese, the content of the core may be determined by measuring the content of manganese.


In the present application, by limiting the content of manganese to be within the above range, it is possible to effectively avoid problems such as poor structural stability of the positive electrode active material and density decline that may be caused if the content of manganese element is too large, so as to improve performances of the secondary battery in terms of cycle, storage, and compaction density, and the like. In addition, it is also possible to avoid problems such as low voltage plateau that may be caused if the content of manganese element is too small, so as to improve energy density of the secondary battery.


In the present application, by defining the content of phosphorus as to be within the above range, the following can be effectively avoided: if the content of the elemental phosphorus is too high, it may cause covalency of P—O to be too strong and affect conductivity of small polarons, thereby affecting electrical conductivity of the positive electrode active material; if the content of the elemental phosphorus is too small, it is possible to enable lattice structure of the pyrophosphate salts in the core and in the first cladding layer, and/or the phosphate salts in the second cladding layer to be less stable, thereby affecting overall stability of the positive electrode active material.


The weight ratio of the manganese content to the phosphorus content has the following effects on performances of secondary batteries: if the weight ratio is too large, it means that there is too much manganese, and thus leaching out of manganese ions will increase, which affects stability and capacity exertion of the positive electrode active material, and in turn affects cycle performance and storage performance of secondary batteries; if the weight ratio is too small, it means that there is too much phosphorus, a heterogeneous phase is easy to be produced, enabling a discharge voltage plateau of the positive electrode active material to decrease, thus reducing energy density of secondary batteries.


The measurement of manganese and phosphorus element may be carried out by the conventional technical means in the art. In particular, the contents of manganese element and phosphorus element are measured using the following method: a material to be tested is dissolved in dilute hydrochloric acid (with a concentration of 10-30%), the content of each element in the solution is tested using ICP, and then the content of manganese element is measured and converted to obtain its weight percentage.


In some embodiments, the positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure has a lattice change rate of less than 4%, optionally less than 3.8%, and more optionally from 2.0% to 3.8% before and after complete deintercalation and intercalation of lithium.


A lithium intercalation-deintercalation process of LiMnPO4 is a two-phase reaction. The interfacial stress between the two phases is determined by the lattice change rate before and after a lithium intercalation-deintercalation process, and the smaller the lattice change rate is, the smaller the interfacial stress is, and the easier the Li+ transport is. Thus, reducing lattice change rate of the core will facilitate to enhance Li+ transport, thereby improving rate performance of secondary batteries. The positive electrode active material having a core-shell structure described in the present application is capable of realizing a lattice change rate before and after a lithium deintercalation and intercalation process of less than 4%, and thus the positive electrode active material can be used to improve rate performance of secondary batteries. The lattice change rate can be measured by methods known in the art, such as X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns.


In some embodiments, the positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure has a Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration of 4% or less, optionally 2.2% or less, more optionally 1.5% to 2.2%.


The Li/Mn anti-site defect as used in the present application refer to swapping of the Li+ and Mn2+ sites in a LiMnPO4 lattice. The Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration refers to a percentage of Li+ that is swapped with Mn2+ relative to the total amount of Li+. In the present application, the anti-site defect concentration can be determined, for example, according to JIS K 0131-1996.


The positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure described in the present application is capable of realizing a lower Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration described above. Although the mechanism is not yet well understood, the inventors of the present application speculate that since Li+ is capable of swapping with Mn2+ in the lattice of LiMnPO4 and a transport channel for Li+ is a one-dimensional channel, Mn2+ is difficult to migrate in the Li+ transport channel, and it in turn will hinder transport of Li+. As a result, the positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure described in the present application is able to avoid Mn2+ from hindering transport of Li+ while improving its capacity exertion and rate performance because of having a lower Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration within the above range.


In some embodiments, said positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure has a compaction density of 2.2 g/cm3 or more, optionally from 2.2 g/cm3 or more and 2.8 g/cm3 or less, at 3 tonnes (T). The higher the compaction density of the positive electrode active material, the higher the weight per unit volume of the active material is. As a result, increasing the compaction density will be more conducive to improving volumetric energy density of secondary batteries. The compaction density may, for example, be determined according to GB/T 24533-2009.


In some embodiments, said positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure has a surface oxygen valence of is −1.90 or less, optionally −1.90 to −1.98.


The stable valence of oxygen is originally −2, and the closer the valence state to −2, the stronger the ability to gain electrons is, i.e., the stronger the oxidizability is. In a usual case, the surface valence is below −1.7. By limiting the surface oxygen valence of the positive electrode active material to the above range as described above, it is possible to mitigate interfacial side reactions between the positive electrode active material and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution, thereby improving cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries.


The surface oxygen valence state can be measured by methods known in the art, such as by electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS).


In some embodiments, the positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure has a specific surface area of B in m2/g, with B being in the range of 7 to 18, optionally in the range of 10 to 15.


If the specific surface area of the positive electrode active material is high, lithium ion conductivity of the positive electrode plate will be increased, which in turn can improve capacity exertion and rate performance of secondary batteries. However, the specific surface area of the positive electrode active material should not be too high, which may increase contact area between the positive electrode active material and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution, thereby increasing their interfacial side reactions and affecting cycle performance and storage performance of secondary batteries. By controlling the specific surface area of the positive electrode active material in a suitable range, it can ensure that the positive electrode plate has a high lithium ions conductivity, and at the same time, the secondary battery has good rate performance, cycle performance and storage performance. The specific surface area of the positive electrode active material has the common meaning in the art and may be determined by equipment and method known in the art. For example, with reference to GB/T 19587-2017, the nitrogen adsorption specific surface area analysis method can be used for testing, and the BET (BrunauerEmmett Teller) method can be used for calculating. The test can be carried out by Micromeritics Tri-Star 3020 specific surface area aperture analysis tester.


The present application further provides a method for preparing a positive electrode active material, comprising a step of providing a core material and a step of cladding.


In the step of providing a core material, the core has a chemical formula of Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4, in which x is any value in the range of −0.100 to 0.100, y is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.500, and z is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.100; A is one or more elements selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb, and Ge, optionally one or more elements selected from Fe, Ti, V, Ni, Co, and Mg; and R is one or more elements selected from B, Si, N, and S, optionally R is an element selected from among B, Si, N and S.


The step of cladding comprises providing suspensions of LiaMP2O7 and/or Mb(P2O7)c and XPO4, respectively, adding the core material to the suspensions and mixing them, and then performing sintering to obtain the positive electrode active material in which 0≤a≤2, 1≤b≤4, 1≤c≤6, said a, b, and c have an value satisfying such a condition that crystalline pyrophosphate salts of LiaMP2O7 or Mb(P2O7)c are electrically neutral; and each M is independently one or more elements selected from Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb, and Al, and X is one or more elements selected from Li, Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb and Al. The positive electrode active material has a core-shell structure comprising the core and a shell covering the core, wherein the shell comprises a first cladding layer covering the core, a second cladding layer covering the first cladding layer and a third cladding layer covering the second cladding layer, the first cladding layer comprising crystalline pyrophosphate salts LiaMP2O7 and/or Mb(P2O7)c, the second cladding layer comprises crystalline phosphate salts XPO4; and wherein the third cladding layer is carbon.


In some embodiments, the step of providing a core material comprises the Step (1) and Step (2).


In Step (1), a manganese source, a dopant for element A and an acid were mixed in a container with stirring to obtain manganese salt particles doped with element A.


In Step (2), the manganese salt particles doped with element A is mixed with a lithium source, a phosphorus source and a dopant of element R in a solvent to obtain a slurry, and then carrying out sintering under the protection of an inert gas atmosphere to obtain a core doped with element A and element R, wherein the core doped with element A and element R is Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4, in which x is any value in the range of −0.100 to 0.100, y is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.500, and z is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.100; A is one or more elements selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb, and Ge, optionally one or more elements selected from Fe, Ti, V, Ni, Co, and Mg; and R is one or more elements selected from B, Si, N, and S, optionally R is one element selected from B, Si, N and S.


There is no particular limitation on source of materials in the preparation method of the present application and a source of a certain element may include one or more of an elemental substance, sulfate, halide, nitrate, organic acid salt, oxide, or hydroxide of the element, and the precursor being the source may fulfill the purpose of the preparation methods of the present application.


In some embodiments, the dopant of element A is one or more of elemental substances, carbonates, sulfates, chlorates, nitrates, organic acids, oxides, hydroxides of one or more of the respective elements selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb and Ge.


In some embodiments, the dopant of element R is one or more of an inorganic acid, an organic acid, a sulfate, a chloride, a nitrate, an organic acid salt, an oxide, a hydroxide of one or more of the respective elements selected from B, Si, N and S.


In the present application, a manganese source may be a manganese-containing substance known in the art that can be used to prepare lithium manganese phosphate. As an example, the manganese source may be one or more selected from elemental manganese, manganese dioxide, manganese phosphate, manganese oxalate, and manganese carbonate.


In the present application, an acid may be one or more selected from inorganic acids such as hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, nitric acid, phosphoric acid, silicic acid, siliceous acid, and organic acids such as oxalic acid. In some embodiments, the acid is a dilute organic acid with a concentration of 60 wt % or less.


In some embodiments, a lithium source may be a lithium-containing substance known in the art that can be used to prepare lithium manganese phosphate. For example, the lithium source may be one or more selected from lithium carbonate, lithium hydroxide, lithium phosphate, and lithium dihydrogen phosphate.


In the present application, a phosphorus source may be a phosphorus-containing substance known in the art that can be used to prepare lithium manganese phosphate. For example, the phosphorus source may be one or more selected from diammonium hydrogen phosphate, ammonium dihydrogen phosphate, ammonium phosphate and phosphoric acid.


In some embodiments, the manganese source, the dopant of element A and the acid are reacted in a solvent to obtain a suspension of manganese salts doped with element A, and then the suspension is filtered, dried, and sanded to obtain manganese salt particles doped with element A having a particle size of 50-200 nm.


In some embodiments, the slurry in step (2) is dried to obtain powder, and then the powder is sintered to obtain a core doped with element A and element R.


In some embodiments, the mixing in the step (1) is carried out at a temperature of 20° C. to 120° C., optionally 40° C. to 120° C. The stirring in the step (1) is carried out at 400 rpm to 700 rpm for 1 h to 9 h, optionally 3 h to 7 h.


Optionally, the reaction temperature in the step (1) may be about 30° C., about 50° C., about 60° C., about 70° C., about 80° C., about 90° C., about 100° C., about 110° C., or about 120° C.; the stirring in the step (1) is carried out for about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 5 hours, about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, or about 9 hours; optionally, the reaction temperature and the stirring time in step (1) may be within any range of any of the above values.


In some embodiments, the mixing in the step (2) is carried out at a temperature of 20° C. to 120° C., optionally 40° C. to 120° C. for 1 hour to 12 hours. Optionally, the reaction temperature in the step (2) may be about 30° C., about 50° C., about 60° C., about 70° C., about 80° C., about 90° C., about 100° C., about 110° C., or about 120° C.; the mixing in the step (2) is carried out for about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 5 hours, about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, about 9 hours, about 10 hours, about 11 hours, or about 12 hours; optionally, the reaction temperature and the mixing time in the step (2) may be within any range of any of the above values.


When the temperature and time in the preparation of the core particles are within the above range, the core as obtained and the positive electrode active material made therefrom have fewer lattice defects, which is favorable to reducing leaching out of manganese ions and reducing interfacial side reactions between the positive electrode active material and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution, thereby improving cycle performance, storage performance and safety performance of secondary batteries.


In some embodiments, optionally, in the process of preparing the lithium manganese phosphate particles doped with element A and element R, pH of the solution is controlled to be from 3.5 to 6, optionally, the pH of the solution is controlled to be from 4 to 6, and more optionally, the pH of the solution is controlled to be from 4 to 5. It is to be noted that the pH of the resultant mixture can be adjusted in the present application by a method commonly used in the art, for example, by adding an acid or a base.


Optionally, in some embodiments, in the step (2), a molar ratio of the manganese salt particles doped with element A to a lithium source and a phosphorus source is 1:(0.5-2.1):(0.5-2.1), and more optionally, a molar ratio of the manganese salt particles doped with element A to a lithium source and to a phosphorus source is about 1:1:1.


In some embodiments, optionally, the sintering is carried out at the following conditions in the preparation of A-element and R-element doped lithium manganese phosphate. The sintering is carried out at an atmosphere of inert gas or a mixture of inert gas and hydrogen at a temperature of from 600° C. to 950° C. for 4 hours to 10 hours; optionally, the sintering may be carried out at a temperature of from about 650° C., to about 700° C., to about 750° C., to about 800° C., to about 850° C., or to about 900° C. for about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 5 hours, about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, about 9 hours, or about 10 hours. Optionally, the sintering temperature and sintering time may be within any range of any of the above values. In the preparation of A-element and R-element doped lithium manganese phosphate, when the sintering temperature is too low and the sintering time is too short, it will lead to a lower crystallinity of the core of the positive electrode active material, which will affect its overall performance; when the sintering temperature is too high, heterogeneous phases are likely to appear in the core of the positive electrode active material, which will affect its overall performance; and when the sintering time is too long, particles of the core of the positive electrode active material will be larger, thus affecting capacity exertion, compaction density, rate performance, and the like.


Optionally, the protective atmosphere is a mixture of 70-90 vol % nitrogen and 10-30 vol % hydrogen.


In some embodiments, the cladding step comprises a first cladding step, a second cladding step and a third cladding step.


In the first cladding step, a source of element M, a source of phosphorus and an acid, and optionally a source of lithium, are dissolved in a solvent to obtain a suspension for a first cladding layer; the core obtained in the step of providing a core material is mixed with the suspension for a first cladding layer obtained in the first cladding step sufficiently, followed by drying, and sintering to obtain a material covered by a first cladding layer.


In the second cladding step, a source of element X, a phosphorus source, and an acid are dissolved in a solvent to obtain a suspension for a second cladding layer; the material covered by a first cladding layer obtained in the first cladding step is mixed with the suspension for a second cladding layer obtained in the second cladding step sufficiently, followed by drying, and sintering, to obtain a material covered by two cladding layers.


In the third cladding step, a carbon source is dissolved in a solvent fully to obtain a solution for a third cladding layer; then the material covered by two cladding layers obtained in the second cladding step is added to the solution for a third cladding layer, and mixed well, followed by drying and sintering to obtain a material covered by three cladding layers, i.e., a positive electrode active material.


As an example, the source of element M is one or more of elemental substance, carbonates, sulfates, chlorates, nitrates, organic acids, oxides, hydroxides of one or more of the respective elements selected from Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb, and Al.


As an example, the source of element X is one or more of elemental substances, carbonates, sulfates, chlorates, nitrates, organic acids, oxides, hydroxides of one or more of the respective elements Li, Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb, and Al.


The addition amount of the sources of each of elements A, R, M, and X depends on the target doping amount, and a ratio of the amounts of lithium source, manganese source, and phosphorus source is based on a stoichiometric ratio.


As an example, the carbon source is one or more of starch, sucrose, glucose, polyvinyl alcohol, polyethylene glycol, and citric acid.


In some embodiments, in the first cladding step, pH of the solution comprising the source of element M, the phosphorus source and the acid, and optionally the lithium source, is controlled to be from 3.5 to 6.5, and then it is allowed to react for from 1 hour to 5 hours with stirring, and then the solution is warmed up to from 50° C. to 120° C., and maintained at that temperature for from 2 hours to 10 hours. In some embodiments, sintering is carried out at 650° C. to 800° C. for 2 hours to 6 hours in the first cladding step.


Optionally, in the first cladding step, it is allowed to react fully. Optionally, in the first cladding step, the reaction proceeds for about 1.5 hours, about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 4.5 hours, or about 5 hours. Optionally, the reaction time in the first cladding step may be within any range of any of the above values.


Optionally, in the first cladding step, pH of the solution is controlled to be from 4 to 6.


Optionally, in the first cladding step, the solution is warmed to about 55° C., about 60° C., about 70° C., about 80° C., about 90° C., about 100° C., about 110° C., or about 120° C. and held at that temperature for about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 5 hours, about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, about 9 hours, or about 10 hours; optionally, the temperature at which the warming occurs and the holding time in the first cladding step may be within any range of any of the above values.


Optionally, in the first cladding step, the sintering may be carried out at about 650° C., about 700° C., about 750° C., or about 800° C. for about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 5 hours, or about 6 hours; optionally, the sintering temperature and the sintering time, may be within any range of any of the above values.


In the first cladding step, by controlling the sintering temperature and time within the above range, the following can be effectively avoided: when the sintering temperature in the first cladding step is too low and the sintering time is too short, this will result in the first cladding layer having a low degree of crystallinity and more amorphous matter, which will lead to a decrease in the effect of reducing leaching out of metals, thereby affecting cycle performance and storage performance of secondary batteries; whereas, if the sintering temperature is too high, this will lead to the appearance of heterogeneous phases in the first cladding layer, which will also affect its effect of reducing leaching out of metals, thereby affecting cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries; and if the sintering time is too long, this will increase a thickness of the first cladding layer, affecting migration of Li+, thereby affecting capacity exertion and rate performance of secondary batteries.


In some embodiments, in the second cladding step, the source of element X, the phosphorus source and the acid are dissolved in a solvent, then stirred and reacted for 1 hour to 10 hours, and then the solution is warmed up to 60° C. to 150° C. and maintained at that temperature for 2 hours to 10 hours. In some embodiments, the sintering in the second cladding step is carried out at 500° C. to 700° C. for 6 hours to 10 hours.


Optionally, in the second cladding step, it is allowed to react fully. Optionally, in the second cladding step, the reaction proceeds for about 1.5 hours, about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 4.5 hours, about 5 hours, about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, about 9 hours, or about 10 hours. Optionally, the reaction time in the second cladding step may be within any range of any of the above values.


Optionally, in the second cladding step, the solution is warmed to about 65° C., about 70° C., about 80° C., about 90° C., about 100° C., about 110° C., about 120° C., about 130° C., about 140° C., or about 150° C. and maintained at that temperature for about 2 hours, about 3 hours, about 4 hours, about 5 hours, about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, about 9 hours, or about 10 hours; optionally, the temperature at which the warming occurs and the holding time in the second cladding step may be within any range of any of the above values.


In the step of providing the core material and in the first cladding step and the second cladding step, prior to sintering, i.e., in the preparation of the core material in which a chemical reaction takes place (steps (1) and (2)) as well as in the preparation of a suspension for a first cladding layer and a suspension for a second cladding layer, it is possible to efficiently avoid the following by selecting an appropriate reaction temperature and reaction time, as described above: if the reaction temperature is too low, the reaction cannot occur or the reaction rate is slow; if the temperature is too high, the product decomposes or a heterogeneous phase is formed; if the reaction time is too long, the product has a larger particle size, which may increase the time and difficulty of the subsequent process; and if the reaction time is too short, then the reaction is incomplete and less product is obtained.


Optionally, in the second cladding step, the sintering may be carried out at about 550° C., about 600° C., or about 700° C. for about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, about 9 hours, or about 10 hours; optionally, the sintering temperature and the sintering time may be in any range of any of the above values.


In the second capping step, by controlling the sintering temperature and time within the above range, the following can be effectively avoided: if the sintering temperature in the second cladding step is too low and the sintering time is too short, this will result in the second cladding layer having a low degree of crystallinity, more amorphous states, and a decline in its performance of lowering a surface reactive activity of the positive electrode active material, thereby affecting the cycling performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries; and if the sintering temperature is too high, this will lead to the appearance of heterogeneous phases in the second cladding layer, which will also affect its effect of lowering a surface reaction activity of the positive electrode active material, thereby affecting cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of secondary batteries; and if the sintering time is too long, this will lead to an increase in a thickness of the second cladding layer, which will affect a voltage plateau of the positive electrode active material, thereby enabling energy density of secondary batteries to decrease.


In some embodiments, the sintering in the third cladding step is carried out at 700° C. to 800° C. for 6 hours to 10 hours. Optionally, in the third cladding step, the sintering may be performed at about 700° C., about 750° C., or about 800° C. for about 6 hours, about 7 hours, about 8 hours, about 9 hours, or about 10 hours; optionally, the temperature of the sintering, and the time of the sintering, may be within any range of any of the above values.


In the third cladding step, by controlling the sintering temperature and time within the above ranges, the following can be effectively avoided: if the sintering temperature in the third cladding step is too low, this will result in a decrease in the degree of graphitization of the third cladding layer, which will affect its electrical conductivity, thereby affecting capacity exertion of the positive electrode active material; if the sintering temperature is too high, this will result in an excessive degree of graphitization of the third cladding layer, which will affect the Li+ transmission, thereby affecting capacity exertion of the positive electrode active material; if the sintering time is too short, it will result in a too thin cladding layer, affecting its electrical conductivity, thereby affecting capacity exertion of the positive electrode active material; if the sintering time is too long, it will result in a too thick cladding layer, affecting compaction density of the positive electrode active material.


In the above-described first cladding step, second cladding step, and third cladding step, the drying may all be carried out at a drying temperature of 100° C. to 200° C., optionally 110° C. to 190° C., more optionally 120° C. to 180° C., even more optionally 120° C. to 170° C., and most optionally 120° C. to 160° C., and the drying time may be from 3 hours to 9 hours, optionally 4 hours to 8 hours, more optionally 5 hours to 7 hours, and most optionally about 6 hours.


By adopting the positive electrode active material prepared by the method for preparing the positive electrode active material described in the present application, the secondary battery prepared therefrom has a reduced leaching out of Mn and Mn-site doping elements after cycle, and has improved high-temperature storage performance, cycle performance, and rate performance. In addition, the raw materials are widely available, with a low cost and simple process, which is conducive to industrialization.


The positive electrode plate of the present application comprises a positive electrode current collector and a positive electrode film layer provided on at least one surface of the positive electrode current collector. In particular, said positive electrode current collector has two surfaces opposite to each other in the direction of its own thickness, and said positive electrode film layer is provided on either or both of two opposite surfaces of said positive electrode current collector. The positive electrode film layer comprises the positive electrode active material of the present application described above.


In some embodiments, optionally, said positive electrode active material is present in said positive electrode film layer in a content of from 90 wt % to 99.5 wt %, based on the total weight of said positive electrode film layer. More optionally, said positive electrode active material is present in said positive electrode film layer in a content of from 95 wt % to 99.5 wt %, based on the total weight of said positive electrode film layer.


The positive electrode film layer does not exclude other positive electrode active materials than the positive electrode material composition with a core-shell structure provided by the present application. For example, in some embodiments, the positive electrode film layer may further comprise at least one of a lithium transition metal oxide and a modified compound thereof. By way of example, said other positive electrode materials may include at least one of lithium cobalt oxide, lithium nickel oxide, lithium manganese oxide, lithium nickel cobalt oxide, lithium manganese cobalt oxide, lithium nickel manganese oxide, lithium nickel cobalt manganese oxide, lithium nickel cobalt aluminum oxide, and respective modified compounds thereof.


In some embodiments, said positive electrode film layer optionally further comprises a positive electrode conductive agent. The present application does not specifically limit the type of said positive electrode conductive agent, and as an example, said positive electrode conductive agent includes at least one of superconducting carbon, conductive graphite, acetylene black, carbon black, Ketjen black, carbon dots, carbon nanotubes, graphene, and carbon nanofibers.


In some embodiments, said positive electrode film layer optionally further comprises a binder. The present application does not specifically limit the type of said binder, and as an example, said binder may include at least one of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), vinylidene fluoride-tetrafluoroethylene-propylene terpolymer, vinylidene fluoride-hexafluoropropylene-tetrafluoroethylene terpolymer, tetrafluoroethylene-hexafluoropropylene copolymer, and fluorine-containing acrylate-based resin.


In some embodiments, said positive electrode current collector may be a metal foil or a composite current collector. As an example of a metal foil, an aluminum foil may be used. The composite current collector may include a polymeric material matrix and a metallic material layer formed on at least one surface of the polymeric material matrix. As an example, the metallic material may be at least one selected from aluminum, aluminum alloy, nickel, nickel alloy, titanium, titanium alloy, silver, and silver alloy. As an example, the polymeric material matrix may be selected from polypropylene (PP), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polybutylene terephthalate (PBT), polystyrene (PS), polyethylene (PE), etc.


Said positive electrode film layer is usually made by applying a positive electrode slurry to the positive collector followed by drying and cold pressing. Said positive electrode slurry is usually formed by dispersing the positive electrode active material, an optional conductive agent, an optional binder, and any other components in a solvent and stirring uniformly. The solvent may be N-methylpyrrolidone (NMP), but is not limited thereto.


[Negative Electrode Plate]


In some embodiments, said negative electrode plate comprises a negative electrode current collector and a negative electrode film layer provided on at least one surface of said negative electrode current collector and comprising a negative electrode active material. For example, said negative electrode current collector has two surfaces opposite to each other in the direction of its own thickness, and said negative electrode film layer is provided on either or both of two opposite surfaces of said negative electrode current collector.


Said negative electrode active material may be a negative electrode active material known in the art for use in secondary batteries. By way of example, said negative electrode active material includes, but is not limited to, at least one of natural graphite, artificial graphite, soft carbon, hard carbon, silicon-based material, tin-based material, and lithium titanate. Said silicon-based material may include at least one of elemental silicon, a silicon oxide, a silicon carbon composite, a silicon nitrogen composite, a silicon alloy material. Said tin-based materials may include at least one of elemental tin, a tin oxide, and a tin alloy material. The present application is not limited to these materials, and other conventionally known materials that can be used as negative electrode active materials for secondary batteries may also be used. These negative electrode active materials can be used alone, or in combination of two or more materials.


In some embodiments, said negative electrode film layer may further optionally comprise a negative conductive agent. In the present application, the type of said negative conductive agent is not particularly limited and, as an example, said negative conductive agent may include at least one of superconducting carbon, conductive graphite, acetylene black, carbon black, Ketjen black, carbon dots, carbon nanotubes, graphene, and carbon nanofibers.


In some embodiments, said negative electrode film layer may further optionally comprise a negative electrode binder. In the present application, the type of said negative binder is not particularly limited and, as an example, said negative electrode binder may include at least one of styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR), water-soluble unsaturated resin SR-1B, aqueous acrylic resins (e.g., polyacrylic acid PAA, polymethacrylic acid PMAA, polyacrylic acid sodium salt PAAS), polyacrylamide (PAM), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), sodium alginate (SA), and carboxymethyl chitosan (CMCS).


In some embodiments, said negative electrode film layer may optionally also include other additives. As an example, the other additives may include thickeners, e.g., sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), and PTC thermistor material, etc.


In some embodiments, said negative electrode current collector may be a metal foil or a composite collector. As an example of a metal foil, a copper foil may be used. The composite collector may include a polymeric material matrix and a metallic material layer formed on at least one surface of the polymeric material matrix. As an example, the metallic material may be selected from at least one of copper, copper alloy, nickel, nickel alloy, titanium, titanium alloy, silver, and silver alloy. As an example, the polymer material matrix may be selected from polypropylene (PP), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polybutylene terephthalate (PBT), polystyrene (PS), polyethylene (PE), etc.


Said negative electrode film layer is usually made by applying a negative electrode slurry to the negative electrode current collector followed by drying and cold pressing. Said negative electrode slurry is usually formed by dispersing the negative active material, an optional conductive agent, an optional binder, and any other optional additives in a solvent and stirring uniformly. The solvent may be N-methylpyrrolidone (NMP) and deionized water, but is not limited thereto.


Said negative electrode plate does not exclude other additional functional layers than said negative electrode film layer. For example, in some embodiments, the negative electrode plate described in the present application further comprises a conductive primer (e.g. being composed of a conductive agent and a binder) sandwiched between said negative electrode current collector and said negative electrode film layer and disposed on the surface of said negative electrode current collector. In some other embodiments, the negative electrode plate described in this application further comprises a protective layer covering the surface of said negative electrode film layer.


[Separator]


There is no particular limitation on the type of separator in the present application, and any well-known porous-structure separator with good chemical stability and mechanical stability may be used.


In some embodiments, materials of the separator may be at least one of glass fibers, non-woven fabrics, polyethylene, polypropylene and polyvinylidene fluoride. The separator may be a single-layer film or a multi-layer composite film. When the separator is a multi-layer composite film, materials of each layer may be the same or different.


In some embodiments, said positive electrode plate, said separator, and said negative electrode plate may be made into an electrode assembly by a winding process and/or a laminating process.


[Non-Aqueous Electrolytic Solution]


The secondary battery comprises a non-aqueous electrolytic solution, which is a bridge for the passage of lithium ions in the secondary battery, takes the burden of transporting lithium ions between the positive and negative electrodes in the secondary battery, and plays a crucial role in capacity exertion, cycle performance, storage performance, and safety performance of the secondary battery.


The inventors, through research, found that specific elemental doping and surface cladding of lithium manganese phosphate can increase resistance to migration of manganese ions, effectively reduce leaching out of manganese ions, while reducing surface oxygen activity, reducing the content of lithium impurity, reducing interfacial side reactions between the positive electrode active material and the non-aqueous electrolytic solution, and reducing production of gas, so as to improve cycle performance and storage performance of the secondary battery, in particular high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance. However, when the content of pyrophosphate in the first cladding layer is low, its effect of reducing leaching out of manganese ions is not significant. When the content of pyrophosphate is high, it will lead to an increase in impedance of the battery due to its poor ability of pyrophosphate itself to conduct lithium ions, resulting in a limited improvement in rate performance of the secondary battery. For example, the voltage plateau of the positive electrode active material decreases to different degrees.


The inventor further conducted extensive research and skillfully added a first additive shown in Formula 1, 2, and 3 below to a non-aqueous electrolytic solution to break the above bottleneck. Specifically, the non-aqueous electrolytic solution of the present application comprises at least a first additive, and said first additive comprising one or more of the compounds shown in Formula 1, Formula 2, and Formula 3.




embedded image




    • p represents 1, 2 or 3, optionally p represents 1 or 2.

    • r represents 1 or 2.

    • s represents 1 or 2.

    • R11 represents an oxygen atom or C(Y1)2, Y1 independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy.

    • R12 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy.

    • R13 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy.

    • R21, R22, R23, R24 each independently represent a single bond or C(Y2)2, and each of Y2 independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy. R21, R22, R23, and R24 may be the same or different.

    • R31, R32, R33, R34 each independently represent a single bond or C(Y3)2, and Y3 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl, C1-C6 haloalkyl, C1-C6 alkoxy, and C1-C6 haloalkoxy, in which R31, R32, R33, and R34 may be the same or different.

    • R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, an oxygen atom, C1-C6 alkylene, C1-C6 haloalkylene, C1-C6 oxa-alkylene.

    • R35 is absent, i.e.,







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represents




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    • R35 represents a single bond, i.e.,







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represents




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When the non-aqueous electrolytic solution contains the first additive shown in the above Formula 1, Formula 2, and Formula 3, it is capable of forming a layer of sulfur-containing polymer with strong lithium ion conductivity on the surface of the positive electrode active material during the charge process of the secondary battery, so as to enhance lithium ion conductivity of the positive electrode active material, and thereby further enhance capacity exertion and rate performance of the secondary battery.


In addition, the first additive can also coordinate with transition metals on the surface of the positive electrode active material and form a complex, so that interfacial film formed on the surface of the positive electrode active material is more dense and stable, thereby further reducing interfacial side reactions between the positive electrode active material and the non-aqueous electrolytic solution, further reducing leaching out of the manganese ions, and reducing production of gas. Since the first additive has a high reduction potential, it can also accept electrons from a negative electrode during a charge process and reduce itself, and preferentially form a dense and stable interfacial film on the surface of the negative electrode active material over an organic solvent, thereby reducing interfacial side reactions between the negative electrode active material and the non-aqueous electrolytic solution. Therefore, when the non-aqueous electrolytic solution comprises the first additive as shown by Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3, the secondary battery may have a further improved cycle performance and storage performance.


Said first additive comprises one or more of the compounds shown in Formula 1, Formula 2, and Formula 3. Specifically, in some embodiments, said first additive comprises one or more of the compounds shown in formula 1; in some embodiments, said first additive comprises one or more of the compounds shown in formula 2; in some embodiments, said first additive comprises one or more of the compounds shown in formula 3; in some embodiments, said first additive comprises both the compounds shown in formula 1 and the compounds shown in Formula 2; in some embodiments, said first additive comprises the compounds shown in Formula 1 and the compounds shown in Formula 3; in some embodiments, said first additive comprises both the compounds shown in Formula 2 and the compounds shown in Formula 3; and in some embodiments, said first additive comprises both the compounds shown in Formula 1, the compounds shown in Formula 2, and the compounds shown in Formula 3.


In some embodiments of the present application, optionally, Rn represents an oxygen atom or C(Y1)2, with Y1 independently representing one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy. More optionally, Rn represents an oxygen atom or C(Y1)2, with Y1 independently representing one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, and fluorinated propyl.


In some embodiments of the present application, optionally, R12 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy.


In some embodiments of the present application, optionally, R13 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy. More optionally, R13 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl


In some embodiments of the present application, optionally, R21, R22, R23, and R24 independently represent a single bond or methylene (i.e. —CH2—). More optionally, R21, R22, R23, and R24 are not all a single bond. Further optionally, one or both of R21, R22 are methylene, and one or both of R23, R24 are methylene.


For example, R21 and R23 are methylene, and R22 and R24 are a single bond. Alternatively, R21 and R24 are methylene and R22 and R23 are a single bond. Alternatively, R21 and R22 are both methylene, and one of R23 and R24 is methylene and the other is a single bond. Alternatively, R21, R22, R23, and R24 are all methylene.


In some embodiments of the present application, optionally, R31, R32, R33, and R34 independently represent a single bond or methylene, and R31, R32, R33, and R34 are not all a single bond.


In some embodiments of the present application, optionally, R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, an oxygen atom, methylene, ethylene, propylene, fluorinated methylene, fluorinated ethylene, fluorinated propylene, 2-oxa-1,3-propylene, 2-oxa-1,4-butylene, 3-oxa-1,5-pentylene. More optionally, R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, methylene, ethylene, propylene, 2-oxa-1,3-propylene. Further optionally, R35 is a single bond.


In some embodiments, in the compounds shown in Formula 3, R35 is a single bond, one or both of R31 and R32 are methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond. Alternatively, R35 is a single bond, one or both of R33 and R34 are methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond.


In some embodiments, in the compounds shown in Formula 3, R35 is a single bond, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, one of R33 and R34 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond.


In some embodiments, in the compounds shown in Formula 3, R35 is a single bond, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, one of R33 and R34 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond. Alternatively, R35 is a single bond, R33 and R34 are both methylene, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond.


In some embodiments, in the compounds shown in Formula 3, R35 is a single bond, and R31, R32, R33, R34 are all methylene.


In some embodiments, said first additive comprises at least one of the following compounds:




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The inventors, after extensive research, found that with at least one of the above compounds as the first additive, it is capable of forming a more dense and stable interfacial film with stronger lithium ion conductivity on the surface of the positive electrode active material, and a more dense and stable interfacial film on the surface of the negative electrode active material, and even after a long period of charge and discharge, said positive and negative electrode interfacial film are still effective in preventing active materials from coming into contact with the non-aqueous electrolytic solution, thus effectively reducing leaching out of manganese ions and reducing gas production, further improving cycle performance and storage performance of the secondary battery.


The inventor further found that when the non-aqueous electrolytic solution contains too much of the first additive, interfacial impedance on the positive and negative electrodes will increase, and capacity exertion and rate performance of the secondary battery will be affected. Therefore, the content of the first additive in the non-aqueous electrolytic solution should not be too high. In some embodiments, the content of said first additive is W1% by weight, W1 being from 0.01 to 20, optionally from 0.1 to 10, and more optionally from 0.5 to 5, based on the total weight of said non-aqueous electrolytic solution. When the first additive content is within the above range, it can improve lithium ion conductivity of the lithium manganese phosphate positive electrode active material coated with pyrophosphate without significantly increasing interfacial impedance on the positive and negative electrode, and thus the secondary battery is able to have a high capacity exertion and good rate performance, cycle performance and storage performance.


In some embodiments, said first cladding layer has a cladding amount of C1% by weight, said second cladding layer has a cladding amount of C2% by weight, said third cladding layer has a cladding amount of C3% by weight, and said first additive has a content of W1% by weight, which satisfy the relationship of W1/(C1+C2+C3) of from 0.001 to 2, optionally from 0.01 to 1, and more optionally from 0.05 to 1. When W1/(C1+C2+C3) is within the above ranges, the secondary battery is able to have higher capacity exertion and good rate performance, cycle performance and storage performance. And the following can be effectively avoided: when W1/(C1+C2+C3) is small, there is not enough first additive to form a film on the surface of the positive electrode active materials, which cannot obviously improve lithium ion conductivity of the lithium manganese phosphate positive electrode active material coated with pyrophosphate, so that improvement of rate performance of the secondary battery is not obvious; when W1/(C1+C2+C3) is large, too much of the first additive will increase interface resistance on the positive and negative electrodes, affecting capacity exertion and rate performance of the secondary battery.


In some embodiments, the secondary battery has a liquid injection coefficient of Q0 in g/Ah with Q0 satisfying in the range of 2.5 to 4.0.


In some embodiments, said first additive has a content of W1% by weight, said secondary battery has an initial capacity of DO in mAh/g, said secondary battery has a liquid injection coefficient of Q0 in g/Ah, and said positive electrode active material has a specific surface area of B in m2/g, which satisfy the relationship of (W1%×D0×Q0)/B of 0.002 to 10, optionally 0.01 to 5. When (W1%×D0×Q0)/B is in the above range, the secondary battery is capable of having high capacity exertion and good rate performance, cycle performance and storage performance. And the following can be effectively avoided: when (W1%×D0×Q0)/B is small, there is not enough first additive to form a film on the surface of the positive electrode active materials, which cannot obviously improve lithium ion conductivity of the lithium manganese phosphate positive electrode active material coated with pyrophosphate, so that improvement of rate performance of the secondary battery is not obvious; when (W1%×D0×Q0)/B is large, too much of the first additive will increase interface resistance on the positive and negative electrodes, affecting capacity exertion and rate performance of the secondary battery.


An initial capacity DO in mAh/g of secondary batteries can be obtained by the following method. A secondary battery is charged to a charge cut-off voltage at 0.33C at a constant temperature of 25° C. and then is charged at constant voltage until current is less than or equal to 0.05 mA. After that, the battery is allowed to stand for 5 minutes, and then is discharged to a discharge cut-off voltage at 0.33C, at which, a ratio of the discharge capacity to mass of the positive electrode active material is an initial capacity DO in mAh/g of the secondary battery. In the test method of the present application, the charge and discharge cut-off voltage of the secondary battery may be 2.5V-4.3V.


Said non-aqueous electrolytic solution further comprises a lithium salt and an organic solvent. The present application has no particular limitation on the types of said lithium salt and said organic solvent, which may be selected according to actual needs.


As an example, said organic solvent may include one or more of chain carbonate, cyclic carbonate, carboxylic acid ester. Among them, the present application has no specific limitation on the types of said chain carbonate, said cyclic carbonate, and said carboxylic acid ester, which can be selected according to actual needs. Optionally, said organic solvent includes one or more of dimethyl carbonate (DMC), diethyl carbonate (DEC), dipropyl carbonate (DPC), methyl ethyl carbonate (EMC), methyl propyl carbonate (MPC), ethyl propyl carbonate (EPC), ethylene carbonate (EC), propylene carbonate (PC), butylene carbonate (BC), gamma-butyrolactone (GBL), methyl formate (MF), ethyl formate (EF), methyl acetate (MA), ethyl acetate (EA), propyl acetate (PA), methyl propionate (MP), ethyl propionate (EP), propyl propionate (PP), and tetrahydrofuran (THF).


As an example, said lithium salt may include one or more of LiN(CmF2m+1SO2)(CnF2n+1SO2), LiPF6, LiBF4, LiBOB, LiAsF6, Li(FSO2)2N, LiCF3SO3, and LiClO4, with m and n being natural numbers. When the non-aqueous electrolytic solution includes the lithium salt described above, this helps to form a dense, stable and low-impedance interfacial film on the surface of the positive electrode and/or negative electrode active materials, and effectively improves at least one of cycle performance, storage performance and rate performance of the secondary battery.


The cyclic carbonate has a higher dielectric constant, which facilitates dissociation of lithium salts. In some embodiments, said cyclic carbonate may be present in a content of 20 wt % or more, optionally from 20 wt % to 80 wt %, more optionally from 20 wt % to 50 wt %, based on the total weight of said organic solvent. Optionally, said cyclic carbonate includes one or more of ethylene carbonate (EC), propylene carbonate (PC), and butylene carbonate (BC).


The chain carbonate has a smaller dielectric constant and a weaker ability to dissociate lithium salts, but has a low viscosity and good fluidity and thus it can increase migration rate of lithium ions. In some embodiments, said chain carbonate may be present in a content of 10 wt % or more, optionally from 10 wt % to 80 wt %, based on the total weight of said organic solvent. Optionally, said chain carbonate comprises one or more of dimethyl carbonate (DMC), diethyl carbonate (DEC), dipropyl carbonate (DPC), methyl ethyl carbonate (EMC), methyl propyl carbonate (MPC), and ethyl propyl carbonate (EPC).


Carboxylic acid esters have advantages of low viscosity and high dielectric constant and thus it may enhance conductivity of a non-aqueous electrolytic solution. In some embodiments, said carboxylic acid ester may be present in a content of from 0 wt % to 70 wt %, optionally from 0 wt % to 60 wt %, based on the total weight of said organic solvent. Optionally, said carboxylic acid ester comprises one or more of methyl formate (MF), ethyl formate (EF), methyl acetate (MA), ethyl acetate (EA), propyl acetate (PA), methyl propionate (MP), ethyl propionate (EP), and propyl propionate (PP).


With increasing the content of lithium salts, the total number of mobile lithium ions increases, but at the same time, viscosity of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution will also increase, and migration rate of lithium ions slows down instead. Thus, an optimal value for the content of lithium salts occurs. In some embodiments, said lithium salt may be present in a content of from 6 wt % to 39 wt %, optionally from 10 wt % to 31 wt %, more optionally from 11 wt % to 24 wt %, based on the total weight of said non-aqueous electrolytic solution.


In some embodiments, said non-aqueous electrolytic solution further comprises a second additive, said second additive comprising one or more of a cyclic carbonate compound containing an unsaturated bond, a halogen-substituted cyclic carbonate compound, a nitrile compound, a phosphonitrile compound, an aromatic hydrocarbon and halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon compound, an anhydride compound, a phosphite compound, a phosphate compound, a borate compound, a sulfite compound, a methylene disulfonate compound, and an isocyanate compound. When the non-aqueous electrolytic solution comprises both the first additive and the second additive, the second additive helps to form a more dense and stable interfacial film on the surface of the positive electrode and/or negative electrode active materials, so as to be able to further enhance at least one of cycle performance, storage performance, rate performance, and safety performance of secondary batteries. In some embodiments, said second additive is present in a content of W2% by weight, with W2 being 20 or less, optionally from 0.1 to 10, more optionally from 0.5 to 5, based on the total weight of said non-aqueous electrolytic solution.


(a) Cyclic Carbonate Compound Containing Carbon-Carbon Unsaturated Bonds


The cyclic carbonate compound containing carbon-carbon unsaturated bonds may comprise one or more of the compounds shown in Formula 2-1. R36 represents C1-C6 alkylene group with alkenyl or alkynyl substituents on its branched chain, or a substituted or unsubstituted C2-C6 straight-chain alkenylene group, wherein the substituent is one or more selected from a halogen atom, C1-C6 alkyl group, and a C2-C6 alkenyl group.




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Optionally, the cyclic carbonate compound containing a carbon-carbon unsaturated bond may include, but is not limited to, one or more of the following compounds.




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(b) Halogen-Substituted Cyclic Carbonate Compound


The halogen-substituted cyclic carbonate compound may include one or more of the compounds shown in Formula 2-2. R37 represents a halogen-substituted C1-C6 alkylene group, or a halogen-substituted C2-C6 alkenylene group.




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Optionally, the halogen-substituted cyclic carbonate compound may include, without being limited to, one or more of fluoro ethylene carbonate (FEC), fluoro propylene carbonate (FPC), trifluoro propylene carbonate (TFPC), and trans or cis-4,5-difluoro-1,3-dioxolan-2-one (hereinafter, both are collectively referred to as DFEC).


(c) Nitrile Compound


The nitrile compound may be a dinitrile or trinitrile compound. Optionally, the nitrile compound may comprise one or more of the compounds shown in Formulae 2-3 and Formulae 2-4. R38 represents substituted or unsubstituted C1-C12 alkylene, substituted or unsubstituted C1-C12 oxa-alkylene, substituted or unsubstituted C2-C12 alkenylene, or substituted or unsubstituted C2-C12 alkynylene, and R39 to R41 each independently represent, substituted or unsubstituted C0-C12 alkylene, substituted or unsubstituted C1-C12 oxa-alkylene, substituted or unsubstituted C2-C12 alkenylene, or substituted or unsubstituted C2-C12 alkynylene, wherein the substituent is one or more selected from a halogen atom, a nitrile group, C1-C6 alkyl, C2-C6 alkenyl, and C1-C6 alkoxy.




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Optionally, the nitrile compound may include one or more of ethanedinitrile, propanedinitrile, butanedinitrile, pentanedinitrile, hexanedinitrile, heptanedinitrile, octanedinitrile, nonanedinitrile, decanedinitrile, undecanedinitrile, dodecanedinitrile, tetramethylsuccinonitrile, methylpentanedinitrile, butadienedinitrile, 2-pentenedinitrile, hex-2-enedinitrile, hex-3-enedinitrile, oct-4-enedinitrile, oct-4-ynedinitrile, 1,2,3-propane-tricarbonitrile, 1,3,5-pentanetricarbonitrile, 1,3,6-hexanetrinitrile.


(d) Phosphonitrile Compound


The phosphonitrile compound may be a cyclic phosphonitrile compound. The cyclic phosphonitrile compound may include one or more of methoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile, ethoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile, phenoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile, and ethoxy heptafluorocyclotetraphosphonitrile. Optionally, the cyclic phosphonitrile compound may include one or more of methoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile, ethoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile, phenoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile. Further optionally, the cyclic phosphonitrile compound may include methoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile, ethoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile, or a combination thereof.


(e) Aromatic Hydrocarbon and Halogenated Aromatic Hydrocarbon Compound


The aromatic hydrocarbon and halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon compound may include one or more of cyclohexylbenzene, fluorinated cyclohexylbenzene compounds (e.g., 1-fluoro-2-cyclohexylbenzene, 1-fluoro-3-cyclohexylbenzene, 1-fluoro-4-cyclohexylbenzene), t-butylbenzene, t-amylbenzene, 1-fluoro-4-t-butylbenzene, biphenyl, terphenyl (ortho-, meta-, para-), diphenyl ether, fluoro-benzene, difluorobenzene (ortho-, meta-, para-), anisole, 2,4-difluoroanisole, partial hydrides of terphenyl (e.g., 1,2-dicyclohexylbenzene, 2-phenylbicyclohexyl, 1,2-diphenylcyclohexane, o-cyclohexylbiphenyl). Optionally, the aromatic hydrocarbon and halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon compound may include one or more of biphenyl, terphenyl (ortho-, meta-, para-), fluorobenzene, cyclohexylbenzene, t-butylbenzene, t-amylbenzene. Further optionally, the aromatic hydrocarbon and halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon compound may include one or more of biphenyl, o-terphenyl, fluorobenzene, cyclohexylbenzene, and tert-pentylbenzene.


(f) Acid Anhydride Compound


The acid anhydride compound may be a chain acid anhydride or a cyclic acid anhydride. Specifically, the acid anhydride compound may include one or more of acetic anhydride, propionic anhydride, succinic anhydride, maleic anhydride, 2-allyl succinic anhydride, glutaric anhydride, itaconic anhydride, and 3-sulfo-propionic anhydride. Optionally, the acid anhydride compound may include one or more of succinic anhydride, maleic anhydride, and 2-allyl succinic anhydride. Further optionally, the acid anhydride compound may include succinic anhydride, 2-allyl succinic anhydride, or a combination thereof.


(g) Phosphite Compound


The phosphite compound may be a silane phosphite compound, and specifically may include one or more of the compounds shown in Formulae 2-5, with R42 to R50 each independently representing halogen-substituted or unsubstituted C1-C6 alkyl.




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Optionally, the silane phosphite compound may include, but is not limited to, one or more of the following compounds.




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(h) Phosphate Ester Compound


The phosphate ester compound may be a silane phosphate ester compound, and specifically may include one or more of the compounds shown in Formula 2-6, with R51 to R59 each independently representing halogen-substituted or unsubstituted C1-C6 alkyl.




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Optionally, the silane phosphate compound may include, but is not limited to, one or more of the following compounds.




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(i) Borate Ester Compound


The borate ester compound may be a silane borate ester compound, and specifically may include one or more of the compounds shown in Formula 2-7, with R60 to R68 each independently denoting halogen-substituted or unsubstituted C1-C6 alkyl.




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Optionally, the silane borate compound may include, but is not limited to, one or more of the following compounds:




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(j) Sulfite Compound


The sulfite compound may be a cyclic sulfite compound, and specifically may include one or more of the compounds shown in Formulas 2-8. R69 represents substituted or unsubstituted C1-C6 alkylene, substituted or unsubstituted C2-C6 alkenylene, wherein the substituent is one or more selected from a halogen atom, C1-C3 alkylene, and C2-C4 alkenylene.




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Optionally, the sulfite compound may include one or more of ethylene sulfite (ES), propylene sulfite (PS), butylene sulfite (BS).


(k) Methylene Disulfonate Compound


The methylene disulfonate compound may include one or more of the compounds shown in Formulae 2-9. R70 to R73 each independently represent a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, substituted or unsubstituted C1-C10 alkyl group, and substituted or unsubstituted C2-C10 alkenyl, wherein the substituent is one or more selected from a halogen atom, C1-C3 alkyl, and C2-C4 alkenyl.




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Optionally, the methylene disulfonate compound may include, but is not limited to, one or more of the following compounds.




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Further optionally, the methylene disulfonate compound may be methane methylene disulfonate.


(l) Isocyanate Compounds


The isocyanate compound may include one or more of methyl isocyanate, ethyl isocyanate, butyl isocyanate, phenyl isocyanate, tetramethylene diisocyanate, hexamethylene diisocyanate, octamethylene diisocyanate, 1,4-phenylene diisocyanate, 2-isocyanatoethyl acrylate, and 2-isocyanatoethyl methacrylate. Optionally, the isocyanate compound may comprise one or more of hexamethylene diisocyanate, octamethylene diisocyanate, 2-isocyanatoethyl acrylate, and 2-isocyanatoethyl methacrylate.


Optionally, said second additive may comprise one or more of vinylidene carbonate (VC), vinyl ethylene carbonate (VEC), fluorinated ethylene carbonate (FEC), ethanedinitrile, and ethoxy pentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile. These additives are electrochemical reduction additives, and their reduction potential is higher than that of an organic solvent, so that electrochemical reduction can preferentially occur on the surface of the negative electrode active materials to form an interfacial membrane with excellent performances, thereby reducing destruction of the interfacial membrane by the organic solvent, and thus the secondary battery adopting the same can have better electrochemical performance and safety performance.


The non-aqueous electrolytic solution of the present application can be prepared in accordance with conventional methods in the field. For example, said additives, said organic solvent, said lithium salt and the like can be mixed well to obtain an non-aqueous electrolyt is solution. There is no particular limitation on the order of addition of each material. For example, said additive, said lithium salt and the like can be added to said organic solvent and mixed homogeneously to obtain an non-aqueous electrolytic solution.


In the present application, components and their contents in said non-aqueous electrolytic solution can be determined according to methods conventional in the art. For example, they can be determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), ion chromatography (IC), liquid chromatography (LC), nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry (NMR) and the like.


It should be noted that the non-aqueous electrolytic solution of the present application can also be obtained from a secondary battery. An exemplary method of obtaining a non-aqueous electrolytic solution from a secondary battery comprises the step of discharging the secondary battery to a discharge cut-off voltage and then centrifuging it, after which an appropriate amount of liquid obtained from centrifugation is taken for testing.


[Outer Package]


In some embodiments, said secondary battery may include an outer package. The outer package may be used to encapsulate said electrode assembly and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution.


In some embodiments, said outer package of said secondary battery may be a hard case, such as a hard plastic case, an aluminum case, a steel case, and the like. The outer package of the secondary battery may also be a soft package, such as a pouch-type soft package. Material of the soft bag can be plastic, such as at least one of polypropylene (PP), polybutylene terephthalate (PBT), and polybutylene succinate (PBS).


The shape of the secondary battery is not particularly limited in the present application, and it may be cylindrical, square, rectangular or any other shape. FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a secondary battery 5 of a rectangular structure as an example.


In some embodiments, as shown in FIG. 2, the outer package may include a casing 51 and a cover plate 53, wherein the casing 51 may include a bottom plate and side plates connected to the bottom plate, and the bottom plate and the side plates are enclosed to form an accommodating cavity. The casing 51 has an opening communicating with the accommodating cavity, and the cover plate 53 is used to cover the opening to close the accommodating cavity. A positive electrode plate, a separator, and a negative electrode plate may be made into an electrode assembly 52 by a winding process or a laminating process. The electrode assembly 52 is packaged in the accommodating cavity, and the electrolytic solution is infiltrated in the electrode assembly 52. The number of electrode assemblies 52 contained in the secondary battery 5 may be one or more, and may be adjusted according to requirements.


A process for preparing the secondary battery of the present application is well known in the art. In some embodiments, a positive electrode plate, a separator, a negative electrode plate and a non-aqueous electrolytic solution may be assembled into a secondary battery. As an example, a positive electrode plate, a separator, and a negative electrode plate can be made into an electrode assembly by a winding process or a laminating process, and the electrode assembly can be placed in an outer package and is subjected to drying, to which a non-aqueous electrolytic solution is injected. After vacuum encapsulation, resting, chemical formation, and shaping process, a secondary battery can be obtained.


Battery Module


In some embodiments, the secondary batteries according to the present application can be assembled into a battery module, and the number of secondary batteries contained in the battery module can be more than one, and the specific number can be adjusted according to application and capacity of the battery module.



FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of the battery module 4 as an example. As shown in FIG. 3, in the battery module 4, a plurality of secondary batteries 5 may be arranged in sequence along the longitudinal direction of the battery module 4. Certainly, they can also be arranged in any other manner. Furthermore, a plurality of secondary batteries 5 can be fixed with fasteners.


Optionally, the battery module 4 may further include a housing having an accommodating space in which a plurality of secondary batteries 5 are accommodated.


Battery Pack


In some embodiments, the above-mentioned battery modules can also be assembled into a battery pack, and the number of battery modules included in the battery pack can be adjusted according to the application and capacity of the battery pack.



FIGS. 4 and 5 are schematic diagrams of the battery pack 1 as an example. As shown in FIGS. 4 and 5, the battery pack 1 may include a battery case and a plurality of battery modules 4 provided in the battery case. The battery box includes an upper case body 2 and a lower case body 3, and the upper case body 2 is used to cover the lower case body 3 to form a closed space for accommodating the battery modules 4. A plurality of battery modules 4 may be arranged in the battery case in any manner.


Electrical Device


The present application further provides an electrical device comprising at least one of the secondary battery, battery module, and battery pack of the present application. The secondary battery, battery module or battery pack can be used as a power source of the electrical device, and can also be used as an energy storage unit of the electrical device. The electrical device can be, but is not limited to, a mobile device (e.g., a mobile phone, a notebook computer, and the like), an electric vehicle (e.g., a pure electric vehicle, a hybrid electric vehicle, a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle, an electric bicycle, an electric scooter, an electric golf vehicle, an electric truck and the like), an electric train, a ship, a satellite, an energy storage system, and the like.


The electrical device can select a secondary battery, a battery module or a battery pack according to its usage requirements.



FIG. 6 is a schematic diagrams of an electrical device as an example. The electrical device is a pure electric vehicle, a hybrid electric vehicle, or a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle. In order to meet high power and high energy density requirements of the electrical device, a battery pack or a battery module can be used.


As another example, the electrical device may be a mobile phone, a tablet computer, a notebook computer, and the like. The electric device is generally required to be light and thin, and a secondary battery can be used as a power source.


EXAMPLES

The following examples more specifically describe the content disclosed in the present application, and these examples are only used for explanatory description, because various modifications and changes within the scope of the present disclosure are apparent to those skilled in the art. Unless otherwise stated, all parts, percentages, and ratios described in the following examples are based on mass, and all reagents used in the examples are commercially available or synthesized according to conventional methods and can be directly used without further treatment, and all instruments used in the examples are commercially available.


The sources of raw materials involved in examples of the present application are as follows:















Name
Chemical Formula
Supplier
Specification



















Manganese
MnCO3
Shandong West Asia Chemical
1
Kg


Carbonate

Industry Co.


Lithium
Li2CO3
Shandong West Asia Chemical
1
Kg


Carbonate

Industry Co.


Magnesium
MgCO3
Shandong West Asia Chemical
1
Kg


carbonate

Industry Co.


Zinc Carbonate
ZnCO3
Wuhan Xinru Chemical Co.
25
Kg


Ferrous
FeCO3
Xi'an Lanzhiguang Fine
1
Kg


Carbonate

Material Co.


Nickel Sulfate
NiCO3
Shandong West Asia Chemical
1
Kg




Industry Co.


Titanium
Ti(SO4)2
Shandong West Asia Chemical
1
Kg


Sulfate

Industry Co.


Cobalt Sulfate
CoSO4
Xiamen Zhixin Chemical Co.
500
g


Vanadium
VCl2
Shanghai Jin Jin Le Industry Co.
1
Kg


Dichloride


Oxalic acid
C2H2O4•2(H2O)
Shanghai Jin Jin Le Industry Co.
1
Kg


dihydrate


Ammonium
NH4H2PO4
Shanghai Chengshao Biotechnology Co.
500
g


dihydrogen


phosphate


Sucrose
C12H22O11
Shanghai Yuanye Biotechnology Co.
100
g










Diluent
H2SO4
Shenzhen Haisian Biotechnology Co.
In a mass percent-


sulfuric acid


age of 60%


Dilute nitric
HNO3
Anhui Lingtian Fine Chemical Co.
In a mass percent-


acid


age of 60%


Siliceous acid
H2SiO3
Shanghai Yuanye Biotechnology Co.
100 g, in a mass





percentage of 99.8%









Example 1

Step 1: Preparing positive electrode active material


Step S1: Preparing Fe, Co, V and S Co-Doped Manganese Oxalate


689.6 g of manganese carbonate, 455.27 g of ferrous carbonate, 4.65 g of cobalt sulfate, and 4.87 g of vanadium dichloride were added to a mixer and mixed thoroughly for 6 hours. The obtained mixture was then transferred to a reactor and 5 L of deionized water and 1260.6 g of oxalic acid dihydrate were added, and the resulting mixture was heated to 80° C., and stirred sufficiently at 500 rpm for 6 h. The mixture was mixed homogeneously until the reaction ended without bubbles being generated to obtain a suspension of Fe, Co, and V co-doped manganese oxalate. The suspension was then filtered, dried at 120° C., and then sanded to obtain manganese oxalate particles with a particle size of 100 nm.


Step S2: Preparing Core Li0.997Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003P0.997S0.003O4


1793.1 g of manganese oxalate prepared in step S1 as well as 368.3 g of lithium carbonate, 1146.6 g of ammonium dihydrogen phosphate, and 4.9 g of dilute sulfuric acid were added into 20 L of deionized water, and then mixed thoroughly, and it was allowed to react with homogeneous mixing for 10 hours at 80° C. to obtain a slurry. The slurry was transferred to a spray drying equipment for spray drying and granulation, and dried at a temperature of 250° C. to obtain powder. The powder was sintered in a roller kiln at 700° C. for 4 hours in a protective atmosphere (90% nitrogen and 10% hydrogen) to obtain the core material.


Step S3: Preparing a Suspension for a First Cladding Layer


Li2FeP2O7 solution was prepared by dissolving 7.4 g of lithium carbonate, 11.6 g of ferrous carbonate, 23.0 g of ammonium dihydrogen phosphate, and 12.6 g of oxalic acid dihydrate in 500 mL of deionized water, controlling pH to be 5, followed by stirring and reacting for 2 hours at room temperature to obtain the solution, after which the solution was warmed up to 80° C. and kept at this temperature for 4 hours to obtain the first cladding layer suspension.


Step S4: Applying the First Cladding Layer


1571.9 g of the doped lithium manganese phosphate core material obtained in step S2 is added to the suspension for a first cladding layer with a cladding material content of 15.7 g obtained in step S3, and mixed with sufficient stirring for 6 hours, and after mixing well, transferred to an oven at 120° C. for drying for 6 hours, and then sintered at 650° C. for 6 hours to obtain a material cladded with pyrophosphate.


Step S5: Preparing a Suspension for a Second Cladding Layer


3.7 g of lithium carbonate, 11.6 g of ferrous carbonate, 11.5 g of ammonium dihydrogen phosphate, and 12.6 g of oxalic acid dihydrate were dissolved in 1500 mL of deionized water, and then stirred and reacted for 6 hours to obtain a solution, and then the solution was warmed up to 120° C. and kept at this temperature for 6 hours to obtain a suspension for a second cladding layer.


Step S6: Applying the Second Cladding Layer


1586.8 g of the material cladded with pyrophosphate obtained in Step S4 was added to the suspension for a second cladding layer with a cladding material content of 47.1 g obtained in Step S5, and mixed with thorough stirring for 6 hours, and after the mixture was homogeneous, it was transferred to an oven at 120° C. for drying for 6 hours, and then sintered at 700° C. for 8 hours to obtain a material cladded with two layers.


Step S7: Preparing an Aqueous Solution for a Third Cladding Layer


37.3 g of sucrose was dissolved in 500 g of deionized water, then stirred and fully dissolved to obtain an aqueous solution of sucrose.


Step S8: Applying the Third Cladding Layer


1633.9 g of the two-layer coated material obtained in Step S6 was added to the sucrose solution obtained in Step S7, stirred and mixed together for 6 hours, and after mixing uniformly, transferred to an oven at 150° C. to dry for 6 hours, and then sintered at 700° C. for 10 hours to obtain a material cladded with three layers.


Step 2: Preparing of Positive Electrode Plate


The positive electrode active material with a three-cladding layer structure prepared above, acetylene black as a conductive agent, and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) as a binder were added to N-methylpyrrolidone (NMP) at a weight ratio of 97.0:1.2:1.8 with stirring until these materials were mixed homogeneously to obtain a positive electrode slurry. The positive electrode slurry was then uniformly applied to an aluminum foil at 0.280 g/1540.25 mm2, and then dried, cold pressed, and slit to obtain a positive electrode plate.


Step 3: Preparing Negative Electrode Plate


Artificial graphite as a negative active material, hard carbon, acetylene black as a conductive agent, styrene butadiene rubber (SBR) as a binder, sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) as a thickener at a weight ratio of 90:5:2:2:1 were dissolved in a solvent deionized water, which was stirred and mixed well to prepare a negative electrode slurry. The negative electrode slurry was uniformly applied to a copper foil as a current collector at 0.117 g/1540.25 mm2, and then dried, cold pressed, and slit to obtain a negative electrode plate.


Step 4: Preparing Non-Aqueous Electrolytic Solution


In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O<0.1 ppm, O2<0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of compound H 12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-aqueous electrolytic solution.


Step 5: Preparing Separator


A commercially available PP-PE copolymer microporous film with a thickness of m and an average pore size of 80 nm was used (from Trico Electronic Technology, model 20).


Step 6: Preparing Full Battery


The positive electrode plate, separator and negative electrode plate were stacked in order, so that the separator was sandwiched between the positive and negative electrodes for isolation, and then they were wound to form an electrode assembly. The electrode assembly was placed in an outer package, filled with the above electrolytic solution, and encapsulated to obtain a full battery. The full battery has a liquid injection coefficient of 3.5 g/Ah.


[Preparation of Button Battery]


The positive electrode active material prepared above, polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), and acetylene black were added to N-methyl pyrrolidone (NMP) at a weight ratio of 90:5:5 and stirred in a drying room to make a slurry. The above slurry was applied to an aluminum foil, dried and cold pressed to form a positive electrode plate. The applied amount was 0.2 g/cm2 and the compaction density was 2.0 g/cm3.


Lithium plate was used as a negative electrode, it was assembled together with the above prepared positive electrode plate and the non-aqueous electrolytic solution in a button battery box to form a button battery (hereinafter also referred to as “button”).


Examples 2-66 and Comparative Examples 1-18

Examples 2-66 and Comparative Examples 1-18 were the same as Example 1 in terms of the preparation of positive electrode active material, preparation of non-aqueous electrolytic solution and preparation of battery. Examples 30-42 were the same as Example 1 with the exception for the material for a first cladding layer and the material for a second cladding layer. Examples 43-66 were the same as Example 1 with the exception for the preparation of non-aqueous electrolytic solution. The differences in the preparation of positive electrode active material were listed in tables 1 to 8 wherein Comparative Examples 1-2, 4-10 and 12 did not comprise a first cladding layer and thus no steps S3 and S4 was involved; and Comparative Examples 1-11 did not comprise a second cladding layer and thus no steps S5 and S6 was involved. The differences in the preparation of non-aqueous electrolytic solution were listed in table 9.


In addition, in all Examples and Comparative Examples of the present application, the materials for a first cladding layer and for a second cladding layer were by default crystalline if not indicated otherwise.









TABLE 1







Materials for the core












Materials used



No.
Core
in step S1
Materials used in step S2





Comparative
LiMnPO4
manganese carbonate,
manganese oxalate dihydrate


Examples

1149.3 g; water, 5 L;
obtained in step S1 (counted as


1 and 13

oxalic acid
C2O4Mn•2H2O), 1789.6 g;




dihydrate,
lithium carbonate, 369.4 g; ammonium




1260.6 g
dihydrogen phosphate, 1150.1 g;





water, 20 L


Comparative
LiMn0.60Fe0.40PO4
manganese carbonate,
ferromanganese oxalate dihydrate


Example 2

689.6 g;
obtained in step S1(counted as




ferrous carbonate,
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.40•2H2O), 1793.2 g;




463.4 g; water, 5 L;
lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




oxalic acid
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




dihydrate,
1150.1 g; water, 20 L




1260.6 g


Comparative
LiMn0.80Fe0.20PO4
manganese carbonate,
ferromanganese oxalate dihydrate


Example 3

919.4 g;
obtained in step S1 (counted as




ferrous carbonate,
C2O4Mn0.80Fe0.20•2H2O), 1791.4 g;




231.7 g; water, 5 L;
lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




oxalic acid
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




dihydrate,
1150.1 g; water, 20 L




1260.6 g


Comparative
LiMn0.70Fe0.295V0.005PO4
manganese carbonate,
ferrovanadium manganese oxalate


Example 4

804.5 g;
dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1 (counted as




341.8 g;
C2O4Mn0.70Fe0.295V0.005•2H2O),




vanadium dichloride,
1792.0 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




6.1 g; water, 5 L;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




oxalic acid
1150.1 g; water, 20 L




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Comparative
LiMn0.60Fe0.395Mg0.005PO4
manganese carbonate,
ferromanganese magnesium oxalate


Examples

689.6 g;
dihydrate obtained in step


5 and 15

ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




457.6 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.395Mg0.005•2H2O),




magnesium carbonate,
1791.6 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




4.2 g; water, 5 L;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




oxalic acid
1150.1 g; water, 20 L




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Comparative
LiMn0.60Fe0.35Ni0.05PO4
manganese carbonate,
nickel ferromanganese oxalate


Example 6

689.6 g;
dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




405.4 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.35Ni0.05•2H2O),




nickel carbonate,
1794.6 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




59.3 g; water, 5 L;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




oxalic acid
1150.1 g; water, 20 L




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Comparative
LiMn0.60Fe0.395V0.002Ni0.003PO4
manganese carbonate,
nickel manganese iron vanadium


Example 7

689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step


and 9

ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




457.6 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.395V0.002Ni0.003•2H2O),




vanadium dichloride,
1793.2 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




2.4 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




nickel carbonate,
1150.1 g; water, 20 L




3.6 g; water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Comparative
LiMn0.60Fe0.395V0.002Mg0.003PO4
manganese carbonate,
magnesium manganese iron


Example 8

689.6 g;
vanadium oxalate dihydrate obtained




ferrous carbonate,
in step S1(counted as




457.6 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.395V0.002Mg0.003•2H2O),




vanadium dichloride,
1792.1 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




2.4 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




magnesium carbonate,
1150.1 g; water, 20 L




2.53 g; water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Comparative
Li0.997Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003P0.997S0.003O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese iron vanadium cobalt


Examples

689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step


10-12,

ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as


Comparative

455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003•2H2O),


Example

cobalt sulfate,
1793.1 g; lithium carbonate, 368.3 g;


16-18 and

4.7 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,


Example 1-10

vanadium dichloride,
1146.6 g; dilute sulfuric acid, 4.9 g;




4.9 g; water, 5 L;
water, 20 L




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Comparative
Li1.2MnP0.8 Si0.2O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese oxalate dihydrate


Example

1149.3 g; water, 5 L;
obtained in step S1(counted as


14

oxalic acid
C2O4Mn•2H2O), 1789.6 g;




dihydrate,
lithium carbonate, 443.3 g;




1260.6 g
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,





920.1 g; siliceous acid, 156.2 g;





water, 20 L


Example 11
Li1.001Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003P0.999Si0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese iron vanadium cobalt




689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step S1




ferrous carbonate,
(counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003•2H2O),




cobalt sulfate,
1793.1 g; lithium carbonate, 369.8 g;




4.7 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1148.9 g; siliceous acid, 0.8 g;




4.9 g; water, 5 L;
water, 20 L




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 12
LiMn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003P0.998N0.002O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese iron vanadium cobalt




689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step S1




ferrous carbonate,
(counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003•2H2O),




cobalt sulfate,
1793.1 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




4.7 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1147.8 g; dilute nitric acid, 2.7 g;




4.9 g; water, 5 L;
water, 20 L




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 13
Li0.995Mn0.65Fe0.341V0.004Co0.005P0.995S0.005O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese iron vanadium cobalt




747.1 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step S1




ferrous carbonate,
(counted as




395.1 g;
C2O4Mn0.65Fe0.341V0.004Co0.005•2H2O),




cobalt sulfate,
1792.7 g; lithium carbonate, 367.6 g;




7.8 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1144.3 g; dilute sulfuric acid, 8.2 g;




4.9 g; water, 5 L;
water, 20 L




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 14
Li1.002Mn0.70Fe0.293V0.004Co0.003P0.998Si0.002O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese iron vanadium cobalt




804.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step S1




ferrous carbonate,
(counted as




339.5 g;
C2O4Mn0.70Fe0.293V0.004Co0.003•2H2O),




cobalt sulfate,
1792.2 g; lithium carbonate, 370.2 g;




4.7 g;
1147.8; siliceous acid, 1.6 g; water,




vanadium dichloride,
20 L




4.9 g; water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Examples
LiMn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003P0.999N0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese iron vanadium cobalt


15 and 17

689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step S1




ferrous carbonate,
(counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003•2H2O),




cobalt sulfate,
1793.1 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




4.7 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1148.9 g; dilute nitric acid, 1.4 g;




4.9 g;
water, 20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 16
Li0.997Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003P0.997S0.003O4
manganese carbonate,
manganese iron vanadium cobalt




689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step S1




ferrous carbonate,
(counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Co0.003•2H2O),




cobalt sulfate,
1793.1 g; lithium carbonate, 368.7 g;




4.7 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1146.6 g; dilute sulfuric acid, 4.9 g;




4.9 g; water, 5 L;
water, 20 L




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 18
LiMn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Mg0.003P0.995N0.005O4
manganese carbonate,
magnesium manganese iron




689.6 g;
vanadium oxalate dihydrate obtained




ferrous carbonate,
in step S1 (counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Mg0.003•2H2O),




magnesium carbonate,
1791.1 g; lithium carbonate,




2.5 g;
369.4 g; ammonium dihydrogen




vanadium dichloride,
phosphate, 1144.3 g; dilute nitric




4.9 g;
acid, 7.0 g; water, 20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 19
Li0.999Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Mg0.003P0.999S0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
magnesium manganese iron




689.6 g;
vanadium oxalate dihydrate obtained




ferrous carbonate,
in step S1 (counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Mg0.003•2H2O),




magnesium carbonate,
1791.1 g; lithium carbonate,




2.5 g;
369.0 g; ammonium dihydrogen




vanadium dichloride,
phosphate, 1148.9 g; dilute sulfuric




4.9 g;
acid, 1.6 g; water, 20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 20
Li0.998Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Ni0.003P0.998S0.002O4
manganese carbonate,
nickel manganese iron vanadium




689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Ni0.003•2H2O),




nickel carbonate,
1792.2 g; lithium carbonate, 368.7 g;




3.6 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1147.8 g; dilute sulfuric acid, 3.2 g;




4.9 g;
water, 20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example
Li1.001Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Ni0.003P0.999Si0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
nickel manganese iron vanadium


21-24

689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Ni0.003•2H2O),




nickel carbonate,
1793.1 g; lithium carbonate, 369.8 g;




3.6 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1148.9 g; siliceous acid, 0.8 g; water,




4.9 g;
20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 25
Li1.001Mn0.50Fe0.493V0.004Ni0.003P0.999Si0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
nickel manganese iron vanadium




574.7 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




571.2 g;
C2O4Mn0.50Fe0.493V0.004Ni0.003•2H2O),




nickel carbonate,
1794.0 g; lithium carbonate, 369.8 g;




3.6 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1148.9 g; siliceous acid, 0.8 g; water,




4.9 g;
20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 26
Li1.001Mn0.999Fe0.001P0.999Si0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
ferromanganese oxalate dihydrate




1148.2 g;
obtained in step S1(counted as




ferrous carbonate,
C2O4Mn0.999Fe0.001•2H2O), 1789.6 g;




1.2 g;
lithium carbonate, 369.8 g;




water, 5 L;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




oxalic acid
1148.9 g; siliceous acid, 0.8 g;




dihydrate,
water, 20 L




1260.6 g


Example 27
LiMn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Ni0.003P0.9N0.100O4
manganese carbonate,
nickel manganese iron vanadium




689.6 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




455.3 g;
C2O4Mn0.60Fe0.393V0.004Ni0.003•2H2O),




nickel carbonate,
1793.1 g; lithium carbonate, 369.4 g;




3.6 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




vanadium dichloride,
1035.1 g; dilute nitric acid, 140.0 g;




4.9 g;
water, 20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 28
Li1.001Mn0.40Fe0.593V0.004Ni0.003P0.999Si0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
nickel manganese iron vanadium




459.7 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




686.9 g;
C2O4Mn0.40Fe0.593V0.004Ni0.003•2H2O),




vanadium dichloride,
1794.9 g; lithium carbonate, 369.8 g;




4.8 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




nickel carbonate,
1148.9 g; siliceous acid, 0.8 g;




3.6 g;
water, 20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g


Example 29
Li1.001Mn0.40Fe0.393V0.204Ni0.003P0.999Si0.001O4
manganese carbonate,
nickel manganese iron vanadium




459.7 g;
oxalate dihydrate obtained in step




ferrous carbonate,
S1(counted as




455.2 g;
C2O4Mn0.40Fe0.393V0.204Ni0.003•2H2O),




vanadium dichloride,
1785.1 g; lithium carbonate, 369.8 g;




248.6 g;
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate,




nickel carbonate,
1148.9 g; siliceous acid, 0.8 g;




3.6 g;
water, 20 L




water, 5 L;




oxalic acid




dihydrate,




1260.6 g
















TABLE 2







Preparation of suspension for a first cladding layer (Step S3)










Materials for a first
Preparation of suspension for a


No.
cladding layer
first cladding layer





Comparative Examples 3,
Amorphous Li2FeP2O7
7.4 g lithium carbonate;


16

11.6 g ferrous carbonate;




23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate;




pH being controlled to 5


Comparative Example 11,
crystalline Li2FeP2O7
7.4 g lithium carbonate;


13to 15, 17-18; Examples

11.6 g ferrous carbonate;


1-14, 19, 21-29

23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate;




pH being controlled to 5


Examples 15-16
crystalline Al4(P2O7)3
53.3 g aluminum chloride;




34.5 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




18.9 g oxalic acid dihydrate;




pH being controlled to 4


Examples 17-18, 20
crystalline Li2NiP2O7
7.4 g lithium carbonate;




11.9 g nickel carbonate;




23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate;




pH being controlled to 5
















TABLE 3







Cladding of the first cladding layer (Step S4)















Material

















for a first

Step S4: Cladding of the first cladding layer















cladding
The
The amount of







layer and
addition
corresponding







its amount
amount
cladding







(based on
of the
material in







the weight
core in
suspension for
Mixing
Drying
Sintering
Sintering



of the
step
a first cladding
time
temperature
temperature
time


No.
core)
S4
layer
(hour)
(° C.)
(° C.)
(hour)

















Comparative
2% amorphous
1570.4 g
31.4 g
6
120
500
4


Example 3
Li2FeP2O7








Comparative
1% crystalline
1571.1 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6


Example 11
Li2FeP2O7








Comparative
2% crystalline
1568.5 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6


Example 13
Li2FeP2O7








Comparative
2% crystalline
1562.8 g
31.2 g
6
120
650
6


Example 14
Li2FeP2O7








Comparative
2% crystalline
1570.6 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6


Example 15
Li2FeP2O7








Comparative
2% amorphous
1571.1 g
31.4 g
6
120
500
4


Example 16
Li2FeP2O7








Comparative
2% crystalline
1571.1 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6


Example 17
Li2FeP2O7








Comparative
1% crystalline
1571.9 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6


Example 18
Li2FeP2O7








Examples 1-
1% crystalline
1571.9 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6


4,8-10
Li2FeP2O7








Example 5
2%crystalline
1571.9 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 6
3% crystalline
1571.1 g
47.1 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 7
5% crystalline
1571.9 g
78.6 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 11
1% crystalline
1572.1 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 12
1% crystalline
1571.7 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 13
2% crystalline
1571.4 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 14
2.5% crystalline
1571.9 g
39.3 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 15
2% crystalline
1571.9 g
31.4 g
6
120
680
8



Al4(P2O7)3








Example 16
3% crystalline
1571.9 g
47.2 g
6
120
680
8



Al4(P2O7)3








Example 17
1.5% crystalline
1571.9 g
23.6 g
6
120
630
6



Li2NiP2O7








Example 18
1% crystalline
1570.1 g
15.7 g
6
120
630
6



Li2NiP2O7








Example 19
2% crystalline
1571.0 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 20
1% crystalline
1571.9 g
15.7 g
6
120
630
6



Li2NiP2O7








Examples 21-
2% crystalline
1572.1 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6


24
Li2FeP2O7








Example 22
5.50% crystalline
1572.1 g
86.5 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 25
1% crystalline
1573.0 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 26
1% crystalline
1568.6 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 27
1% crystalline
1569.2 g
15.7 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 28
2% crystalline
1573.9 g
31.4 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7








Example 29
2% crystalline
1564.1 g
31.2 g
6
120
650
6



Li2FeP2O7
















TABLE 4







Preparation of the second cladding layer suspension (Step S5)










Material for the second
Step S5: Preparation of suspension


No.
cladding layer
for a second cladding layer





Comparative Examples 12,
crystalline LiFePO4
3.7 g lithium carbonate;


18; Examples 1-14,

11.6 g ferrous carbonate;


18-19, 25-27

11.5 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate


Comparative Examples
crystalline LiCoPO4
3.7 g lithium carbonate;


13-16; Examples 15, 17,

15.5 g cobalt sulfate;


20, 21-24, 28-29

11.5 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate


Comparative Example 17
amorphous LiCoPO4
3.7 g lithium carbonate;




15.5 g cobalt sulfate;




11.5 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate


Example 16
crystalline LiNiPO4
3.7 g lithium carbonate;




11.9 g nickel carbonate;




11.5 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate;




12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate
















TABLE 5







Cladding of the second cladding layer (Step S6)













Step S6: Cladding of the second cladding layer

















The amount of







Material for a
Addition
corresponding







second cladding
amount of
cladding material







layer and its
pyrophosphate-
in suspension for







amount (based on
coated
a second
Mixing
Drying
Sintering
Sintering



the weight of the
material in
cladding layer
time
temperature
temperature
time


No.
core)
step S6 (g)
(g)
(hour)
(° C.)
(° C.)
(hour)

















Comparative
3% crystalline
1571.1
47.1
6
120
700
8


Example 12
LiFePO4








Comparative
4% crystalline
1599.9
62.7
6
120
750
8


Example 13
LiCoPO4








Comparative
4% crystalline
1594.0
62.5
6
120
750
8


Example 14
LiCoPO4








Comparative
4% crystalline
1602.0
62.8
6
120
750
8


Example 15
LiCoPO4








Comparative
4% crystalline
1602.5
62.8
6
120
750
8


Example 16
LiCoPO4








Comparative
4% amorphous
1602.5
62.8
6
120
650
8


Example 17
LiCoPO4








Comparative
3% crystalline
1586.8
47.1
6
120
700
8


Example 18
LiFePO4








Examples 1-
3% crystalline
1586.8
47.1
6
120
700
8


4
LiFePO4








Example 5
3% crystalline
1602.5
47.1
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 6
3% crystalline
1618.2
47.1
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 7
3%crystalline
1649.6
47.1
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 8
1% crystalline
1586.8
15.7
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 9
4% crystalline
1586.8
62.8
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 10
5% crystalline
1586.8
78.6
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 11
2.50% crystalline
1587.8
39.3
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 12
3% crystalline
1587.4
47.2
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 13
2% crystalline
1602.8
31.4
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 14
3.50% crystalline
1610.5
55.0
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 15
2.5% crystalline
1603.3
39.3
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 16
3% crystalline
1619.0
47.2
6
120
680
8



LiNiPO4








Example 17
2.5% crystalline
1595.5
39.3
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 18
3% crystalline
1585.9
47.1
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 19
4% crystalline
1602.4
62.8
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 20
3% crystalline
1587.7
47.2
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 21
4% crystalline
1603.5
62.9
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 22
4% crystalline
1658.6
62.9
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 23
5.50% crystalline
1603.5
86.5
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 24
4% crystalline
1603.5
62.9
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 25
3% crystalline
1588.7
47.2
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 26
3% crystalline
1584.3
47.1
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 27
3% crystalline
1584.9
47.1
6
120
700
8



LiFePO4








Example 28
4% crystalline
1605.4
63.0
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4








Example 29
4% crystalline
1605.4
63.0
6
120
750
8



LiCoPO4





Note:


Comparative Example 12 relates to the amount of the added core.













TABLE 6







Cladding of the third cladding layer (Step S8)


















Addition










amount of



















material that
Step S8: Cladding of the third cladding layer
















Material for
Molar
has been
Amount







a third
ratio of
covered with
of
Mixing
Drying
Sintering
Sintering



cladding
SP2 to
two layers in
sucrose
time
temperature
temperature
time


No.
layer
SP3
step S8 (g)
(g)
(hour)
(° C.)
(° C.)
(hour)


















Comparative
1% carbon
2.5
1568.5
37.3
6
150
650
8


Example 1










Comparative
2% carbon
2.8
1572.2
74.7
6
150
680
8


Example 2










Comparative
2% carbon
2.7
1601.8
74.6
6
150
680
7


Example 3










Comparative
1% carbon
2.4
1571.0
37.3
6
150
630
8


Example 4










Comparative
1.5% carbon
2.6
1570.6
56.0
6
150
650
7


Example 5










Comparative
2.5% carbon
2.8
1573.6
93.4
6
150
680
8


Example 6










Comparative
1% carbon
2.7
1572.2
37.3
6
150
680
7


Example 7










Comparative
1.5% carbon
2.9
1571.1
56.0
6
150
680
10


Example 8










Comparative
1% carbon
2.2
1572.2
37.3
6
150
600
8


Example 9










Comparative
1% carbon
2.4
1571.1
37.3
6
150
630
8


Example 10










Comparative
1% carbon
2.3
1586.8
37.3
6
150
620
8


Example 11










Comparative
1% carbon
2.1
1618.2
37.3
6
150
600
6


Example 12










Comparative
1% carbon
2
1662.6
37.3
6
120
600
6


Example 13










Comparative
1% carbon
1.8
1656.5
37.1
6
120
600
6


Example 14










Comparative
1% carbon
1.7
1664.8
37.3
6
100
600
6


Example 15










Comparative
1% carbon
3.1
1665.4
37.3
6
150
700
10


Example 16










Comparative
1% carbon
3.5
1665.4
37.3
6
150
750
10


Example 17










Comparative
1% carbon
2.2
1633.9
37.3
6
150
700
10


Example 18










Example 1
1% carbon
2.2
1633.9
37.3
6
150
700
10


Example 2
3% carbon
2.3
1633.9
111.9
6
150
600
9


Example 3
4% carbon
2.1
1633.9
149.2
6
150
600
6


Example 4
5% carbon
2.4
1633.9
186.5
6
150
630
8


Example 5
1% carbon
2.5
1649.6
37.3
6
150
650
8


Example 6
1% carbon
2.5
1665.3
37.3
6
150
650
8


Example 7
1% carbon
2.4
1696.7
37.3
6
150
630
8


Example 8
1% carbon
2.3
1602.5
37.3
6
150
600
9


Example 9
1% carbon
2.2
1649.6
37.3
6
150
600
8


Example 10
1% carbon
2.2
1665.3
37.3
6
150
600
9


Example 11
1.5% carbon
2.3
1629.0
56.1
6
150
600
9


Example 12
2% carbon
2.4
1634.6
74.7
6
150
630
8


Example 13
2% carbon
2.5
1634.2
74.6
6
150
650
8


Example 14
2.5% carbon
2.7
1665.5
93.3
6
150
680
7


Example 15
2% carbon
2.8
1642.6
74.7
6
150
680
8


Example 16
1% carbon
2.7
1666.2
37.3
6
150
680
7


Example 17
1.5% carbon
2.3
1634.8
56.0
6
150
600
9


Example 18
1% carbon
2.6
1633.0
37.3
6
150
650
7


Example 19
1.5% carbon
2.4
1665.2
56.0
6
150
630
8


Example 20
1.5% carbon
2.2
1634.8
56.0
6
150
600
9


Example 21
1% carbon
2.2
1666.4
37.3
6
150
600
9


Example 22
1% carbon
2.3
1721.4
37.3
6
150
600
9


Example 23
1% carbon
2.4
1690.0
37.3
6
150
630
8


Example 24
5.5% carbon
2.6
1666.4
205.4
6
150
650
7


Example 25
1% carbon
2.4
1635.9
37.4
6
150
630
8


Example 26
1% carbon
2.3
1631.3
37.3
6
150
600
9


Example 27
1.5% carbon
2.1
1631.9
55.9
6
150
600
6


Example 28
1% carbon
0.07
1668.3
37.4
6
80
600
6


Example 29
1% carbon
13
1668.3
37.4
6
150
850
10





Note:


Comparative Examples 1-2 and 4-10 relate to the amount of the added core, Comparative Examples 3 and 11 relate to the amount of the added material which has been covered by the first layer.













TABLE 7







Investigation of materials for the first cladding layer










Materials for a first
Preparation of suspension for a


No.
cladding layer
first cladding layer





Example 30
crystalline Li2MgP2O7
Dissolving 7.4 g lithium carbonate, 8.4 g magnesium carbonate,




23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate and 12.6 g oxalic acid




dihydrate in 500 mL of deionized water with a controlled pH




of 5, and then stirring and fully reacting for 2 hours to




obtain a solution, after which the solution was warmed to




80° C. and maintained at this temperature for 4 hours to




obtain a suspension


Example 31
crystalline Li2CoP2O7
Dissolving 7.4 g lithium carbonate, 15.5 g cobalt sulfate,




23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate and 12.6 g oxalic acid




dihydrate in 500 mL of deionized water with a controlled




pH of 5, and then stirring and fully reacting for 2 hours




to obtain a solution, after which the solution was warmed




to 80° C. and maintained at this temperature for 4 hours




to obtain a suspension


Example 32
crystalline Li2CuP2O7
Dissolving 7.4 g lithium carbonate, 16.0 g copper sulfate,




23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate and 12.6 g oxalic acid




dihydrate in 500 mL of deionized water with a controlled




pH of 5, and then stirring and fully reacting for 2 hours




to obtain a solution, after which the solution was warmed




to 80° C. and maintained at this temperature for 4 hours




to obtain a suspension


Example 33
crystalline Li2ZnP2O7
Dissolving 7.4 g lithium carbonate, 12.5 g zinc carbonate,




23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen phosphate and 12.6 g oxalic acid




dihydrate in 500 mL of deionized water with a controlled




pH of 5, and then stirring and fully reacting for 2 hours




to obtain a solution, after which the solution was warmed




to 80° C. and maintained at this temperature for 4 hours




to obtain a suspension


Example 34
crystalline TiP2O7
Dissolving 24.0 g titanium sulfate, 23.0 g ammonium




dihydrogen phosphate and 12.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate




in 500 mL of deionized water with a controlled pH of 5,




and then stirring and fully reacting for 2 hours to obtain




a solution, after which the solution was warmed to 80° C.




and maintained at this temperature for 4 hours to obtain a




suspension


Example 35
crystalline Ag4P2O7
Dissolving 67.9 g silver Nitrate, 23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen




phosphate and 25.2 g oxalic acid dihydrate in 500 mL of




deionized water with a controlled pH of 5, and then




stirring and fully reacting for 2 hours to obtain a solution,




after which the solution was warmed to 80° C. and




maintained at this temperature for 4 hours to obtain a




suspension


Example 36
crystalline ZrP2O7
Dissolving 56.6 g zirconium sulfate, 23.0 g ammonium dihydrogen




phosphate and 25.2 g oxalic acid dihydrate in 500 mL of




deionized water with a controlled pH of 5, and then stirring




and fully reacting for 2 hours to obtain a solution, after




which the solution was warmed to 80° C. and maintained at




this temperature for 4 hours to obtain a suspension
















TABLE 8







Investigation of materials for the second cladding layer










Materials for the
Preparation of suspension for the


No.
second cladding layer
second cladding layer





Example 37
crystalline Cu3(PO4)2
Dissolving 48.0 g copper sulfate, 23.0 g ammonium




dihydrogen phosphate, 37.8 g oxalic acid dihydrate in




1500 mL of deionized water, then stirring and fully




reacting for 6 hours to obtain a solution, after




which the solution was heated to 120° C. and




maintained at this temperature for 6 hours to obtain




a suspension


Example 38
crystalline Zn3(PO4)2
Dissolving 37.6 g zinc carbonate, 23.0 g ammonium




dihydrogen phosphate and 37.8 g oxalic acid dihydrate




in 1500 mL of deionized water, then stirring and fully




reacting for 6 hours to obtain a solution, after which




the solution was heated to 120° C. and maintained at




this temperature for 6 hours to obtain a suspension


Example 39
crystalline Ti3(PO4)4
Dissolving 72.0 g titanium sulfate, 46.0 g ammonium




dihydrogen phosphate and 75.6 g oxalic acid dihydrate




in 1500 mL of deionized water, then stirring and fully




reacting for 6 hours to obtain a solution, after which




the solution was heated to 120° C. and maintained at




this temperature for 6 hours to obtain a suspension


Example 40
crystalline Ag3PO4
Dissolving 50.9 g silver Nitrate, 11.5 g ammonium




dihydrogen phosphate and 18.9 g oxalic acid dihydrate




in 1500 mL of deionized water, then stirring and fully




reacting for 6 hours to obtain a solution, after which




the solution was heated to 120° C. and maintained at




this temperature for 6 hours to obtain a suspension


Example 41
crystalline Zr3(PO4)4
Dissolving 85.0 g zirconium sulfate, 46.0 g ammonium




dihydrogen phosphate and 37.8 g oxalic acid dihydrate




in 1500 mL of deionized water, then stirring and fully




reacting for 6 hours to obtain a solution, after which




the solution was heated to 120° C. and maintained at




this temperature for 6 hours to obtain a suspension


Example 42
crystalline AlPO4
Dissolving 13.3 g aluminum chloride, 11.5 g ammonium




dihydrogen phosphate and 18.9 g oxalic acid dihydrate




in 1500 mL of deionized water, then stirring and fully




reacting for 6 hours to obtain a solution, after which




the solution was heated to 120° C. and maintained at




this temperature for 6 hours to obtain a suspension
















TABLE 9







Preparation of non-aqueous electrolytic solution (Step 4)








No.
Preparation of non-aqueous electrolytic solution





Comparative
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene carbonate


Examples 1-18
(EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at a volume



ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



LiPF6 was dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-aqueous



electrolytic solution.


Examples 1-42
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene carbonate



(EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at a volume



ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of compound H12



were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-aqueous electrolytic



solution.


Example 43
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H1 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 44
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H2 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 45
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H13 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 46
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H14 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 47
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H21 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 48
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H29 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 49
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H33 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 50
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H35 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 51
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H36 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 52
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H37 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 53
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H38 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 54
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 0.01 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 55
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 0.1 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 56
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 0.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 57
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 1 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 58
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 59
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 10 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 60
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 15 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 61
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6 and 20 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 62
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6, 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 and 0.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of VC



were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-aqueous



electrolytic solution.


Example 63
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6, 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 and 0.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



VEC were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-aqueous



electrolytic solution.


Example 64
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6, 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 and 0.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of FEC



were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-aqueous



electrolytic solution.


Example 65
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6, 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 and 0.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



ethanedinitrile were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred homogeneously, to obtain a non-



aqueous electrolytic solution.


Example 66
In an argon atmosphere glove box (H2O < 0.1 ppm, O2 < 0.1 ppm), as an organic solvent, ethylene



carbonate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC) were mixed homogeneously at



a volume ratio of 1:1:1, in which 12.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic



solution) of LiPF6, 2 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



compound H12 and 0.5 wt % (based on the total weight of the non-aqueous electrolytic solution) of



ethoxypentafluorocyclotriphosphonitrile were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was stirred



homogeneously, to obtain a non-aqueous electrolytic solution.










II. Performance Evaluation


1. Determination of Lattice Change Rate


Under a constant temperature environment of 25° C., a positive electrode active material sample was placed in X-ray powder diffractometer (Bruker D8 Discover model) and tested at 1°/minute. The test data was organized and analyzed. Referring to the standard PDF card, the lattice constants a0, b0, c0, and v0 (a0, b0, and c0 represent the length size in individual directions of lattice cell, respectively, v0 represents the volume of lattice cell, which can be directly obtained through XRD refinement results) were calculated.


Using the preparation of button battery as shown in examples, the positive electrode active material sample was prepared into a button battery. The button battery was charged at a small rate of 0.05C until the current was decreased to 0.01C. Then the positive electrode plate was taken out of the button battery and soaked in dimethyl carbonate (DMC) for 8 hours. After drying and scraping the powder, the particles with a particle size less than 500 nm were obtained by sieving. A sample was taken and its lattice volume v1 was calculated in the same way as the fresh sample was tested above. (v0−v1)/v0×100% representing the lattice change rate (lattice volume change rate) of before and after complete de-intercalation and deintercalation of lithium was shown in the table.


2. Li/Mn Anti-Site Defect Concentration


The XRD results measured in the “Measurement method for lattice change rate” were compared with the PDF (Powder Diffusion File) card of standard crystal to obtain the Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration. Specifically, the XRD results tested in the “Measurement method for lattice change rate” were imported into the General Structural Analysis System (GSAS) software to automatically obtain refined results, which include the occupancy of different atoms. The Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration was obtained by reading the refined results.


3. Compaction Density


5 g of the above prepared positive electrode active material powders were taken and placed in a special mold for compaction (CARVER mold in the United States, model 13 mm), and then the mold was placed on a compaction density instrument. 3 T (tonnes) of pressure was applied and thickness of powders under the pressure was read on the equipment (i.e. the thickness after the pressure is removed, the area of the container used for testing being 1540.25 mm2). The compaction density was calculated via ρ=m/v.


4. Determination of Specific Surface Area:


5 g of the above prepared positive electrode active material powder was taken and tested by using Tri-Star 3020 specific surface area pore size analysis tester from Micromeritics, USA. The specific surface area was calculated by BET (Brunauer Emmett Teller) method. The testing standard was based on GB/T 19587-2017.


5. Determination of Surface Oxygen Valence


5 g of the above prepared positive electrode active material sample was taken and prepared into a button battery according to the preparation of button battery as described in examples. The button battery was charged at a low rate of 0.05C until the current decreased to 0.01C. Then the positive electrode plate was taken out the button battery and soaked in dimethyl carbonate (DMC) for 8 hours. After drying and scraping the powder, the particles with a particle size less than 500 nm were obtained by sieving. The obtained particles were measured with Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy (EELS, Talos F200S model) to obtain the energy loss near edge structure (ELNES), which can reflect the state density and energy level distribution of elements. Based on the density of states and energy level distribution, the number of occupied electrons was calculated by integrating the density of states in valence band, thereby calculating the surface oxygen valence after charge.


6. Determination of Leaching Out of Transition Metal Mn (and Fe Doped at Mn Site)


At 45° C., a full battery prepared in the above Examples and Comparative Examples with capacity reduced to 80% was discharged to 2.0 V of cutoff voltage at a rate of 0.1 C. Then the battery was disassembled, the negative electrode plate was taken out. 30 discs having a unit area (1540.25 mm2) were randomly taken on the negative electrode plate. Inductively coupled plasma emission spectrum (ICP) was tested by using Agilent ICP-OES730. The amounts of Fe (if Fe was doped at Mn site of the positive electrode active material) and of Mn were calculated on the basis of the ICP results, and then the amount of leaching out of Mn (and Fe doped at Mn site) after cycle was calculated. The testing standard was based on EPA-6010D-2014.


7. Measurement of Manganese and Phosphorus in Positive Electrode Active Material


5 g of the positive electrode active material made above was dissolved in 100 mL of Lefort aqua regia (i.e. a mixture of concentrated hydrochloric acid and concentrated nitric acid with a ratio of 1:3), the content of each element in the solution was tested using ICP, and then the content of manganese element or the phosphorus element was measured and converted (amount of manganese element or phosphorus element/amount of positive electrode active material×100%), to obtain its weight percentage.


8. Determination of Initial Specific Capacity of Button Battery


The above prepared button battery in each of the Examples and Comparative Examples was charged to 4.3V at 0.1C, then charged at a constant voltage of 4.3V until the current was less than or equal to 0.05 mA. The button battery was allowed to stand for 5 minutes and then was discharged at 0.1C to 2.0V. The discharge capacity measured at this moment was initial specific capacity, denoted as DO.


9. 3C Charge Constant Current Ratio


Under a constant temperature environment of 25° C., the above prepared fresh button battery in each of the Examples and Comparative Examples was allowed to stand for 5 minutes, then was discharged to 2.5V at ⅓C, then was allowed to stand for 5 minutes, then charged to 4.3 V at ⅓C, then was charged at a constant voltage of 4.3V until the current was less than or equal to 0.05 mA, then was allowed to stand for 5 minutes. The charge capacity at the moment was recorded as C0. The button battery was then discharged to 2.5V at ⅓C, was allowed to stand for 5 minutes and then charged to 4.3V at 3C and was allowed to stand for 5 minutes. The charge capacity at the moment was recorded as C1. A 3C charge constant current ratio was C1/C0×100%.


A higher 3C charge constant current ratio indicates that the secondary battery had a better rate performance.


10. Test of Expansion of Full Battery Upon Storage at 60° C. for 30 Days


The above prepared full battery in the Examples and Comparative Examples was stored at 100% state of charge (SOC) at 60° C. Before, during, and after storage, open circuit voltage (OCV) and AC internal impedance (IMP) of the battery were tested to monitor SOC and volume of the battery was measured. After every 48 hours of storage, the full battery was taken out and allowed to stand for 1 hour, and then open circuit voltage (OCV) and internal impedance (IMP) were tested. After it was cooled to room temperature, volume of the battery was measured using a drainage method. The drainage method included measuring gravity F1 of the battery alone with a balance that can automatically perform unit conversion with a dial data, and then placing the battery completely in deionized water (with a density of 1 g/cm3), measuring gravity F2 of the battery at this moment wherein a buoyant force Fb of the battery was F1−F2, and then according to the Archimedes principle Fb=ρ×g×V, the volume of the battery was calculated: V=(F1−F2)/(ρ×g).


From the OCV and IMP test results, it can be seen that the batteries of the examples maintain a SOC of 99% or higher throughout the testing process until the end of storage.


After 30 days of storage, the volume of battery was measured, and the increased percentage in battery volume after storage compared to the previous battery volume was calculated.


11. Test of Cycle Performance at 45° C. of Full Battery


Under a constant temperature environment of 45° C., the above prepared full battery was charged at 1C to 4.3V, and then charged at a constant voltage at 4.3V until the current was less than or equal to 0.05 mA. The full battery was allowed to stand for 5 minutes, then discharged at 1C to 2.5V. The discharge capacity at this moment was reported as DO. The above charge-discharge cycle was repeated until the discharge capacity was reduced to 80% of DO. The number of cycles that the battery had undergone at this moment was recorded, i.e. cycle number corresponding to 80% capacity retention at 45° C.


12. Test of Crystal Plane Spacing and Orientation Angle:


1 g of the above prepared positive electrode active material powder each was placed in a 50 mL test tube, to which 10 mL of alcohol with 75% by mass was injected, and then it was subjected to sufficient stirring and dispersion for 30 minutes. And then an appropriate amount of the above solution was dropped on ta 300-mesh copper mesh with a clean disposable plastic pipette. At this time, some of the powder would be left on the copper mesh, and then the copper mesh with samples would be transferred to a TEM (Talo F200s G2) sample chamber for testing, thereby obtaining original images of TEM testing.


The above TEM images were opened in DigitalMicrograph software and subjected to Fourier transform (automatically done by the software after clicking the operation) to get a diffraction pattern, the distance from the diffracted spot to the center of diffraction pattern was measured to get a crystal plane spacing, and the orientation angle was calculated according to the Bragg's equation.


A cladding layer could be recognized for different substances contained therein by comparing the resulting data of crystal plane spacing and corresponding orientation angle with their standard values.


13. Test of Thickness of Cladding Layer


A cladding layer was tested for its thickness by FIB by cutting a thin slice of about 100 nm thickness from an individual particle of the positive electrode active material as described above at its middle position, and then subjecting the thin slice to a TEM test, to obtain an original image of TEM.


The original image obtained from the above TEM test was opened in DigitalMicrograph software, and the cladding layer was recognized by the lattice spacing and orientation angle information and then measured for its thickness.


The thickness was measured at three locations for the selected particles and averaged.


14. Determination of a Molar Ratio of the SP2 and SP3 Carbon in a Third Cladding Layer


This test was carried out by Raman spectroscopy. A molar ratio of the two carbons was determined by splitting energy spectrum from the Raman test to obtain Id/Ig in which Id was a peak intensity of the carbon in the SP3 form and Ig was a peak intensity of the carbon in the SP2 form.


15. Determination of the Chemical Formula of Core and the Compositions of Different Cladding Layers


The internal microstructure and surface structure of the positive electrode active material were characterized with high spatial resolution by a spherical Aberration Corrected Scanning Transmission Electron Microscope (ACSTEM). By combining with a three-dimensional reconstruction technology, the chemical formula of the core and the compositions of the cladding layers each of the positive electrode active material were obtained.


Table 10 illustrates properties of the positive electrode active material powder and properties of the prepared positive electrode plates and batteries in Examples 1-42 and Comparative Examples 1-18.


Table 11 illustrates a thickness of each cladding layer and a weight ratio of manganese and phosphorus elements of the positive electrode active materials prepared in Examples 1-14 and Comparative Examples 3-4 and 12.


Table 12 illustrates a crystal plane spacing and orientation angle of materials for a first cladding layer and of materials for a second cladding layer in Examples 1, 30-42.



















TABLE 10










Specific
leaching











surface
out
3 C

Battery
Cycle







area of
of Fe
charge
0.1 C
expansion
numbers




Li/Mn


positive
and
constant
capacity
after
corresponding



Lattice
anti-site


electrode
Mn
current
of
storage
to 80%



change
defect
Compaction
surface
active
(ppm)
ratio
button
at 60° C.
capacity



rate
concentration
density
oxygen
material
after
(mAh/
battery
for 30 d
retention at


No.
(%)
(%)
(g/cm3)
valence
(m2/g)
cycle
g)
(V)
(%)
45° C.

























Comparative
11.4
5.2
1.5
−1.55
15
2060
50.1
125.6
48.6
185


Example












1












Comparative
10.6
3.3
1.67
−1.51
15
1810
54.9
126.4
47.3
243


Example












2












Comparative
10.8
3.4
1.64
−1.64
15
1728
52.1
144.7
41.9
378


Example












3












Comparative
4.3
2.8
1.69
−1.82
15
1096
56.3
151.2
8.4
551


Example












4












Comparative
2.8
2.5
1.65
−1.85
15
31
58.2
148.4
7.5
668


Example












5












Comparative
3.4
2.4
1.61
−1.86
15
64
58.4
149.6
8.6
673


Example












6












Comparative
4.5
2.4
1.73
−1.83
15
85
59.2
148.6
8.3
669


Example












7












Comparative
2.3
2.4
1.68
−1.89
15
30
59.3
152.3
7.3
653


Example












8












Comparative
2.3
2.4
1.75
−1.89
15
30
59.8
152.3
7.3
672


Example












9












Comparative
2.3
2.2
1.81
−1.9
15
28
64.1
154.2
7.2
685


Example












10












Comparative
2.3
2.2
1.92
−1.92
15
12
65.4
154.3
5.4
985


Example












11












Comparative
2.3
2.1
1.95
−1.95
15
18
65.5
154.6
4.2
795


Example












12












Comparative
11.4
5.2
1.63
−1.96
15
56
52.4
130.2
5.4
562


Example












13












Comparative
8.1
3.8
1.76
−1.96
15
41
58.3
135.1
5.1
631


Example












14












Comparative
2
1.8
2.13
−1.96
15
8
61.3
154.3
3.7
1126


Example












15












Comparative
2
1.9
1.95
−1.96
15
18
60.5
152.7
4.5
1019


Example












16












Comparative
2
1.9
1.9
−1.89
15
24
60.4
152.4
5.1
897


Example












17












Comparative
2.5
1.8
2.35
−1.93
15
7
70.3
157.2
4.2
1128


Example












18












Example
2.5
1.8
2.35
−1.93
15
5
84.4
163.5
2.1
1579


1












Example
2.5
1.8
2.24
−1.94
15
4
84.2
162.6
1.9
1754


2












Example
2.5
1.8
2.22
−1.94
15
4
84.1
161.6
1.7
1924


3












Example
2.5
1.8
2.21
−1.95
15
2
84.2
159.8
1.5
1968


4












Example
2.5
1.8
2.33
−1.93
15
4
84.1
163.0
1.6
2101


5












Example
2.5
1.8
2.31
−1.93
15
3
83.6
162.4
1.4
2206


6












Example
2.5
1.8
2.28
−1.93
15
2
82.1
162.0
1.3
2306


7












Example
2.5
1.8
2.29
−1.93
15
6
82.9
162.7
1.7
1481


8












Example
2.5
1.8
2.46
−1.98
15
4
84.4
163.9
1.5
1800


9












Example
2.5
1.8
2.49
−1.98
15
4
86.7
164.1
1.3
2080


10












Example
2.6
1.9
2.38
−1.97
15
4
83.3
163.6
1.8
1436


11












Example
2.4
1.8
2.41
−1.97
15
3
85.7
162.6
1.3
1590


12












Example
2.7
1.9
2.42
−1.97
15
4
86.6
162.9
1.8
1690


13












Example
2.8
1.9
2.45
−1.97
15
2
88.0
160.0
1.9
1831


14












Example
2.2
1.9
2.46
−1.97
15
2
85.4
160.0
1.9
1553


15












Example
2.1
1.9
2.47
−1.98
15
4
84.1
160.4
1.9
1585


16












Example
2.5
1.7
2.41
−1.98
15
3
86.6
161.6
2.3
1761


17












Example
2.3
1.6
2.42
−1.97
15
3
87.5
160.5
2.4
1929


18












Example
2.2
1.7
2.43
−1.97
15
3
88.3
160.5
2.4
1859


19












Example
2.6
1.8
2.42
−1.94
15
3
86.7
160.1
1.7
2041


20












Example
2.4
1.7
2.41
−1.97
15
3
87.5
160.7
1.8
1858


21












Example
2.4
1.8
2.32
−1.95
15
1
82.9
158.2
1.4
2178


22












Example
2.3
1.7
2.46
−1.96
15
2
87.9
157.5
1.2
2303


23












Example
2.2
1.8
2.47
−1.95
15
2
87.7
158.2
1.3
2167


24












Example
2.1
1.7
2.49
−1.98
15
2
90.2
164.9
1.5
2153


25












Example
3.6
2.5
2.21
−1.97
15
6
64.9
158.4
2.4
1424


26












Example
2.8
2.1
2.24
−1.98
15
4
85.4
161.6
1.9
1576


27












Example
2.5
1.9
1.95
−1.94
15
6
62.9
161.1
3.2
1380


28












Example
2.4
1.8
1.98
−1.95
15
5
78.7
161.8
2.3
1466


29












Example
2.4
1.9
2.36
−1.97
15
11
79.0
162.4
2.4
1425


30












Example
2.5
1.7
2.36
−1.96
15
8
80.6
161.8
2.3
1522


31












Example
2.5
1.7
2.38
−1.97
15
10
79.5
162.1
2.2
1476


32












Example
2.6
1.8
2.39
−1.98
15
16
79.8
162.4
2.7
1396


33












Example
2.6
1.9
2.34
−1.96
15
11
82.0
162.7
2.3
1406


34












Example
2.4
1.7
2.36
−1.94
15
8
81.5
163.8
2.6
1543


35












Example
2.5
1.9
2.33
−1.92
15
10
82.3
162.0
2.7
1434


36












Example
2.5
1.7
2.34
−1.92
15
13
78.7
162.3
2.5
1476


37












Example
2.4
1.9
2.33
−1.95
15
19
77.6
160.9
3.0
1336


38












Example
2.2
1.8
2.36
−1.94
15
17
79.8
162.7
2.9
1424


39












Example
2.4
1.9
2.37
−1.91
15
22
82.3
162.0
2.7
1387


40












Example
2.6
1.9
2.38
−1.94
15
19
81.4
161.0
2.6
1365


41












Example
2.4
1.9
2.36
−1.92
15
11
82.2
163.1
2.1
1616


42





















TABLE 11






Thickness of
Thickness of
Thickness of

Weight ratio



first cladding
second cladding
third cladding
Content of Mn
of Mn element


No.
layer (nm)
layer (nm)
layer (nm)
element (wt %)
to P element




















Comparative
4

10
26.1
1.383


Example 3


Comparative


5
24.3
1.241


Example 4


Comparative

7.5
5
19.6
1.034


Example 12


Example 1
2
7.5
5
19
1.023


Example 2
2
7.5
15
18.3
1.023


Example 3
2
7.5
20
18
1.023


Example 4
2
7.5
25
17.9
1.023


Example 5
4
7.5
5
18.7
1.011


Example 6
6
7.5
5
18.3
0.999


Example 7
10
7.5
5
17.6
0.975


Example 8
2
2.5
5
19.8
1.043


Example 9
2
10
5
18.7
1.014


Example 10
2
12.5
5
18.4
1.004


Example 11
2
6.3
7.5
19
1.026


Example 13
4
5
10
18.7
1.108


Example 14
5
8.8
12.5
17.8
1.166




















TABLE 12






Crystal plane

Crystal plane




spacing of
Orientation (111)
spacing of
Orientation (111)



materials for
angle of materials
materials for
angle of materials



first cladding
for first cladding
second cladding
for second cladding


No.
layer (nm)
layer (°)
layer (nm)
layer (°)







Example 1
0.303
29.496
0.348
25.562


Example 30
0.451
19.668
0.348
25.562


Example 31
0.297
30.846
0.348
25.562


Example 32
0.457
19.456
0.348
25.562


Example 33
0.437
20.257
0.348
25.562


Example 34
0.462
19.211
0.348
25.562


Example 35
0.450
19.735
0.348
25.562


Example 36
0.372
23.893
0.348
25.562


Example 37
0.303
29.496
0.374
23.789


Example 38
0.303
29.496
0.360
24.710


Example 39
0.303
29.496
0.350
25.428


Example 40
0.303
29.496
0.425
20.885


Example 41
0.303
29.496
0.356
24.993


Example 42
0.303
29.496
0.244
36.808









As shown in Table 10, the positive electrode active materials obtained by doping modification of lithium manganese phosphate and multilayer cladding of lithium manganese phosphate achieve smaller lattice change rate, smaller concentration of Li/Mn anti-site defects, larger compaction density, surface oxygen valence closer to −2, less leaching out of Mn and Fe after cycle, and better battery performance, such as better high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance. The presence of a first additive in a non-aqueous electrolytic solution is beneficial to further reduce leaching out of Mn and Fe and gas production, which further improves rate performance, high-temperature cycle performance and high-temperature storage performance of batteries.


As can be seen from Table 11, by doping lithium manganese iron phosphate (with a manganese content of 35% and a phosphorus content of about 20%) at manganese and phosphorus sites and cladding it with three cladding layers, the content of manganese element in the positive electrode active material as well as a ratio of the content by weight of manganese element to the content by weight of phosphorus element are significantly reduced. Furthermore, comparing Examples 1-14 with Comparative Examples 3, 4, and 12, and combining with Table 10, it can be seen that the decrease in the manganese element and phosphorus element in the positive electrode active material enables leaching out of manganese ions and iron ions to decrease and performance of the battery prepared therefrom to improve.


Examples 30-42 were the same as Example 1 with the exception for materials for a first cladding layer or materials for a second cladding layer. As can be seen from the combination of Examples 30-42, the use of the first cladding layer and the second cladding layer comprising other elements within the scope of the present application has also resulted in a positive electrode active material with good performance and has achieved good battery performance. As can be seen from Table 12, the crystal plane spacing and orientation angle of the first cladding layer and the second cladding layer of the present application are within the range described in the present application.


Examples 43-66 were the same as Example 1 with the exception for the preparation of non-aqueous electrolytic solution. Table 13 shows performances of the batteries prepared by Examples 43-53. Table 14 shows performances of the batteries prepared by Examples 54-61. Table 15 shows performances of the batteries prepared by Examples 62-66.















TABLE 13













Cycle







Battery
numbers







expansion
corre-





3 C
0.1 C
after
sponding





charge
capacity
storage
to 80%













First additive
constant
of button
at 60° C.
capacity















W1
current
battery
for
retention


No.
Type
(wt %)
ratio (%)
(mAh/g)
30 d (%)
at 45° C.





Example 43
H1
2
81.3
161.6
2.7
1402


Example 44
H2
2
72.5
157.3
4.0
1200


Example 45
H13
2
75.3
159.4
3.7
1267


Example 46
H14
2
81.2
161.5
2.5
1407


Example 47
H21
2
73.7
158.2
3.5
1245


Example 48
H29
2
74.6
159.5
3.3
1276


Example 49
H33
2
83.2
162.6
2.2
1501


Example 50
H35
2
82.6
162.1
2.3
1489


Example 51
H36
2
79.6
161.2
2.8
1396


Example 52
H37
2
74.8
159.5
3.2
1298


Example 53
H38
2
77.9
160.3
3.0
1323























TABLE 14













Battery
Cycle








expan-
numbers







0.1 C
sion
corre-






3 C
capacity
after
sponding






charge
of
storage
to 80%














First
W1/
constant
button
at
capacity



additive
(C1 +
current
battery
60° C.
reten-
















W1
C2 +
ratio
(mAh/
for 30
tion at



Type
(wt %)
C3)
(%)
g)
d (%)
45° C.

















Example
H12
0.01
0.002
71.2
157.4
4.0
1178


54









Example
H12
0.1
0.020
75.0
159.2
3.6
1235


55









Example
H12
0.5
0.100
77.4
160.9
2.9
1385


56









Example
H12
1
0.200
81.3
162.5
2.5
1467


57









Example
H12
5
1.000
80.3
161.3
1.8
1489


58









Example
H12
10
2.000
76.5
160.2
1.5
1345


59









Example
H12
15
3.000
72.9
158.7
1.0
1223


60









Example
H12
20
4.000
71.1
157.3
0.8
1156


61
























TABLE 15















Cycle









Battery
numbers







3 C
0.1 C
expansion
corresponding


















charge
capacity of
after
to 80%














First additive
Second additive
constant
button
storage at
capacity

















W1

W2
current
battery
60° C. for 30
retention at


No.
Type
(wt %)
Type
(wt %)
ratio (%)
(mAh/g)
d (%)
45° C.


















Example
H12
2
VC
0.5
87.5
164.9
0.9
1867


62










Example
H12
2
VEC
0.5
86.7
164.3
1.2
1789


63










Example
H12
2
FEC
0.5
85.3
164.1
1.5
1745


64










Example
H12
2
Ethane
0.5
84.9
163.8
1.8
1634


65


dinitrile







Example
H12
2
Ethoxy
0.5
84.5
163.6
2.0
1600


66


pentafluoro










cyclotriphosphonitrile














As can be seen from the combination of Example 1 and Examples 43-53, the improvement effect on battery performances varies slightly depending on the type of the first additive.


As can be seen from the combination of Example 1 and Examples 54-61, as the content of the first additive is increased from 0.01% to 20%, the leaching out of Fe and Mn from the resulting material after cycle gradually decreases, and the safety performance of the corresponding batteries also improves, but the specific capacity, the 3C charge constant current ratio and the cycle performance at 45° C. will decrease to a certain extent when the content of the first additive is higher.


As can also be seen from the combination of Example 1 and Examples 54-61, when the applied amount of C1% by weight of the first cladding layer, the applied amount of C2% by weight of the second cladding layer, the applied amount of C3% by weight of the third cladding layer, and the content of W1% by weight of the first additive satisfy the relationship of W1/(C1+C2+C3) that is from 0.001 to 2, optionally from 0.01 to 1, and more optionally from 0.05 to 1, it is allowed to further improve the specific capacity, cycle performance, and storage performance of batteries.


As can be seen from the combination of Example 1 and Examples 62-66, when the non-aqueous electrolytic solution further comprises an appropriate amount of the second additive, it is allowed to further enhance the specific capacity, rate performance, high-temperature cycle performance, and high-temperature storage performance of batteries.


It should be noted that this application is not limited to the above embodiments. The above embodiments are only provided as examples, and within the technical solution of the present application, embodiments having substantially the same configuration as the technical idea and exerting the same effects are all included within the technical scope of the present application. In addition, various modifications to the embodiments that can be conceived by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the spirit of the present application and other embodiments constructed by combining some constituent elements in the embodiments are also included in the scope of the present application.

Claims
  • 1. A secondary battery, comprising a positive electrode plate and an non-aqueous electrolytic solution, wherein the positive electrode plate comprises a positive electrode active material with a core-shell structure, said positive electrode active material comprising an core and a shell covering said core, said core having a chemical formula of Li1+xMn1-yAyP1-zRzO4, in which x is any value in the range of −0.100 to 0.100, y is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.500, z is any value in the range of 0.001 to 0.100, said A is one or more elements selected from Zn, Al, Na, K, Mg, Mo, W, Ti, V, Zr, Fe, Ni, Co, Ga, Sn, Sb, Nb, and Ge, optionally one or more elements selected from Fe, Ti, V, Ni, Co and Mg, said R comprises one or more elements selected from B, Si, N and S, optionally one element selected from B, Si, N and S;said x, y and z having a value satisfying such a condition that the core is electrically neutral overall;the shell comprising a first cladding layer covering the core, a second cladding layer covering the first cladding layer and a third cladding layer covering the second cladding layer, in which said first cladding layer comprises crystalline pyrophosphate salts of LiaMP2O7 and/or Mb(P2O7)c, 0≤a≤2, 1≤b≤4, 1≤c≤6, wherein said a, b, and c have an value satisfying such a condition that the crystalline pyrophosphate salts of LiaMP2O7 or Mb(P2O7)c are electrically neutral; and each M in the crystalline pyrophosphate salts of LiaMP2O7 and/or Mb(P2O7)c is independently one or more elements selected from Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb, and Al, andsaid second cladding layer comprises crystalline phosphate salts of XPO4, X is one or more elements selected from Li, Fe, Ni, Mg, Co, Cu, Zn, Ti, Ag, Zr, Nb and Al; andsaid third cladding layer is carbon,said non-aqueous electrolytic solution comprises a first additive which comprises one or more of compounds as shown by Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3,
  • 2. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein said compound shown in Formula 1 satisfies at least one of the following conditions (1) to (4): (1) p represents 1 or 2,(2) R11 represents an oxygen atom or C(Y1)2, with Y1 independently representing one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy,(3) R12 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy, and(4) R13 each independently represents one of a hydrogen atom, a fluorine atom, methyl, ethyl, propyl, fluorinated methyl, fluorinated ethyl, fluorinated propyl, methoxy, ethoxy, and propoxy; and/orsaid compound shown in formula 2 satisfies at least one of the following conditions (5) to (7): (5) R21, R22, R23, R24 independently represent a single bond or methylene,(6) R21, R22, R23, and R24 are not all a single bond, and(7) one or both of R21, R22 are methylene, and one or both of R23, R24 are methylene; and/orsaid compound shown in formula 3 satisfies at least one of the following conditions (8) to (10): (8) R31, R32, R33, and R34 independently represent a single bond or methylene, and R31, R32, R33, and R34 are not all a single bond,(9) R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, an oxygen atom, methylene, ethylene, propylene, fluorinated methylene, fluorinated ethylene, fluorinated propylene, 2-oxa-1,3-propylene, 2-oxa-1,4-butylene, 3-oxa-1,5-pentylene, and(10) R35 is absent or represents one of a single bond, methylene, ethylene, propylene, 2-oxa-1,3-propylene.
  • 3. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein R31, R32, R33, R34, and R35 satisfy any one of the following conditions (1) to (6): (1) R35 is a single bond, one or both of R31 and R32 are methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and(2) R35 is a single bond, one or both of R33 and R34 are methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and(3) R35 is a single bond, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, one of R33 and R34 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and(4) R35 is a single bond, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, one of R33 and R34 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and(5) R35 is a single bond, R33 and R34 are both methylene, one of R31 and R32 is methylene, and the remaining substituents are a single bond, and(6) R35 is a single bond, R31, R32, R33, R34 are all methylene.
  • 4. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein said first additive comprises at least one of the following compounds:
  • 5. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein said first additive is present in an amount of W1% by weight, with W1 being 0.01 to 20, optionally 0.1 to 10, more optionally 0.5 to 5, based on the total weight of said non-aqueous electrolytic solution; and/orsaid first cladding layer is applied in an amount of C1% by weight, with C1 being greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally of greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally of greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 2 wt %, based on the weight of said core; and/orsaid second cladding layer is applied in an amount of C2% by weight, with C2 being greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally of greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally of from 2 wt % to 4 wt %, based on the weight of said core; and/orsaid third cladding layer is applied in an amount of C3% by weight, with C3 being greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 6 wt %, optionally of greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 5.5 wt %, more optionally of greater than 0 wt % and less than or equal to 2 wt %, based on the weight of said core.
  • 6. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 5, wherein W1/(C1+C2+C3) is 0.001 to 2, optionally 0.01 to 1, and more optionally 0.05 to 1.
  • 7. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein the non-aqueous electrolytic solution further includes a second additive, and the second additive comprises one or more of a cyclic carbonate compound containing unsaturated bonds, a halogenated cyclic carbonate compound, a nitrile compound, a phosphonitrile compound, an aromatic hydrocarbon and halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon compound, an anhydride compound, a phosphite ester compound, a phosphate ester compound, a borate ester compound, a sulfite ester compound, a methylene disulfonate compound, and an isocyanate compound.
  • 8. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein said first cladding layer has a thickness of 1 to 10 nm; and/orsaid second cladding layer has a thickness of 2 to 15 nm; and/orsaid third cladding layer has a thickness of 2 to 25 nm.
  • 9. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein in said core, a ratio of y to 1−y is from 1:10 to 1:1, optionally from 1:4 to 1:1; and/ora ratio of z to 1−z is from 1:9 to 1:999, optionally from 1:499 to 1:249.
  • 10. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein said first cladding layer contains crystalline pyrophosphate salts having a crystal plane spacing of 0.293 nm to 0.470 nm, and a crystal orientation (111) angle of 18.00° to 32.00°;said second cladding layer contains crystalline phosphate salts having a crystal plane spacing of 0.244 nm to 0.425 nm, and a crystal orientation (111) angle of from 20.000 to 37.00°.
  • 11. The secondary battery as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 10, wherein the carbon of the third cladding layer is a mixture of SP2 carbon and SP3 carbon, optionally, a molar ratio of the SP2 carbon to SP3 carbon is any value in the range of 0.1 to 10, optionally any value in the range of 2.0 to 3.0.
  • 12. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein, based on the weight of the positive electrode active material, manganese is present in a content in the range of from 10 wt % to 35 wt %, optionally in the range of from 15 wt % to 30 wt %, and more optionally in the range of from 17 wt % to 20 wt %,phosphorus is present in a content in the range of from 12 wt % to 25 wt %, optionally in the range of from 15 wt % to 20 wt %,optionally, a weight ratio of manganese to phosphorus is in the range of 0.90 to 1.25, optionally in the range of 0.95 to 1.20.
  • 13. The secondary battery as claimed in claim 1, wherein said positive electrode active material satisfies at least one of the following conditions (1) to (5): (1) said positive electrode active material has a lattice change rate of 4% or less, optionally 3.8% or less, more optionally from 2.0% to 3.8% before and after complete de-intercalation and intercalation of lithium;(2) said positive electrode active material has a Li/Mn anti-site defect concentration of 4% or less, optionally 2.2% or less, more optionally from 1.5% to 2.2%;(3) said positive electrode active material has a compaction density of 2.2 g/cm3 or more, optionally 2.2 g/cm3 or more and 2.8 g/cm3 or less, at 3 T;(4) said positive electrode active material has a surface oxygen valence of −1.82 or less, optionally −1.89 to −1.98; and(5) said positive electrode active material has a specific surface area of B in m2/g, with B being in the range of 7 to 18, optionally 10 to 15.
  • 14. A battery module, comprising the secondary battery according to claim 1.
  • 15. A battery pack, comprising the battery module according to claim 14.
  • 16. An electrical device comprising the secondary battery according to claim 1.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a Continuation of International Application No. PCT/CN2022/090261 filed on Apr. 29, 2022, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.

US Referenced Citations (1)
Number Name Date Kind
20180166679 Ophir et al. Jun 2018 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (8)
Number Date Country
104600364 May 2015 CN
105261740 Jan 2016 CN
106058225 Oct 2016 CN
110416525 Nov 2019 CN
113764732 Dec 2021 CN
114256448 Mar 2022 CN
2021101432 Jul 2021 JP
2018032569 Feb 2018 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry
International Search Report received in the corresponding international application PCT/CN2022/090261, mailed Nov. 30, 2022.
Written Opinion of ISA received in the corresponding international application PCT/CN2022/090261, mailed Nov. 30, 2022.
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20240283027 A1 Aug 2024 US
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent PCT/CN2022/090261 Apr 2022 WO
Child 18638759 US