Entropy-driven disordered surface formation with durable anti-water stability for ultra-stable layered oxide cathodes in sodium-ion batteries
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Abstract
Conventional layered oxide cathodes for sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) suffer from severe capacity degradation due to crystalline surface reactivity, which triggers parasitic reactions with ambient H2O/O-2, leading to surface corrosion and bulk structural collapse. Herein, we introduce a high-entropy engineering strategy that designs a self-protective cathode, Na0.8Mg0.1Zn0.1Cu0.1Fe0.1Mn0.6O2 (HEO). This material spontaneously forms an entropy-stabilized amorphous surface coating with an ultralow formation energy of 0.16 eV. The coating acts as a kinetic barrier, raising the activation energy for detrimental H2O/O2 reactions by 160 % compared to a low-entropy counterpart (Na0.8Mg0.2Mn0.8O2). The synergy between entropy stabilization and surface amorphization delivers exceptional environmental robustness. After 90 days of water exposure, HEO retains 98 % of its initial capacity, and 99 % capacity retention over 100 cycles, surpassing state-of-the-art layered cathodes in cycling stability. This work establishes a universal framework for designing air/water-resilient cathodes, with immediate implications for scalable manufacturing and long-term storage stability of SIB systems.
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sodium-ion battery, high-entropy cathode, amorphous coating layer, water-resistant ability
Citation
Applied Surface Science. 2026, vol. 720, art. no. 165108.