P2-type NaxMO2 layered oxides (x < 1) are highly promising cathodes for Na-ion batteries (NIBs) but suffer from phase transitions, transition-metal (TM) migration, and structural distortions that limit cycling stability. Here, we combine first-principles modeling and electrochemical measurements to elucidate how configurational entropy governs their structural and electronic response. By comparing low-, medium-, and high-entropy compositions, we show that higher configurational entropy mitigates TM-centered octahedral distortions, suppresses shear-type deformations associated with P2 → O2 transitions via layer gliding, and distributes redox activity across multiple cations (Ni, Co, Fe), avoiding local over-oxidation. Defect-formation analyses reveal that high-entropy mixing significantly discourages out-of-layer TM migration, reducing TM/Navac antisite formation and stabilizing the layered framework upon deep desodiation. Consistently, medium- and high-entropy materials exhibit superior capacity retention and structural reversibility compared to the low-entropy analogue, with further performance enhancement when using room-temperature ionic-liquid (RTIL)-based NaFSI-Pyr14FSI electrolyte, which mitigates Mn dissolution and accounts for enhanced efficiency upon cycling. These findings demonstrate that configurational entropy is a powerful design parameter for achieving robust, high-performance P2-type layered cathodes and provide clear guidelines for entropy-assisted materials engineering in next-generation NIBs.
Entropy-driven mechanisms in P2-type layered oxide cathodes for sodium-ion batteries: new insights from first-principles and electrochemical analysis / Massaro, A., Porporato, S., Botros, M., Piovano, A., Darjazi, H., Stenzel, D., Meligrana, G., Munoz-Garcia, A.B., Breitung, B., Pavone, M., Gerbaldi, C.. - In: JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY. A. - ISSN 2050-7488. - 14:30(2026), pp. 19341-19353. [10.1039/d6ta00673f]
Entropy-driven mechanisms in P2-type layered oxide cathodes for sodium-ion batteries: new insights from first-principles and electrochemical analysis
Darjazi H.;Meligrana G.;Gerbaldi C.
2026
Abstract
P2-type NaxMO2 layered oxides (x < 1) are highly promising cathodes for Na-ion batteries (NIBs) but suffer from phase transitions, transition-metal (TM) migration, and structural distortions that limit cycling stability. Here, we combine first-principles modeling and electrochemical measurements to elucidate how configurational entropy governs their structural and electronic response. By comparing low-, medium-, and high-entropy compositions, we show that higher configurational entropy mitigates TM-centered octahedral distortions, suppresses shear-type deformations associated with P2 → O2 transitions via layer gliding, and distributes redox activity across multiple cations (Ni, Co, Fe), avoiding local over-oxidation. Defect-formation analyses reveal that high-entropy mixing significantly discourages out-of-layer TM migration, reducing TM/Navac antisite formation and stabilizing the layered framework upon deep desodiation. Consistently, medium- and high-entropy materials exhibit superior capacity retention and structural reversibility compared to the low-entropy analogue, with further performance enhancement when using room-temperature ionic-liquid (RTIL)-based NaFSI-Pyr14FSI electrolyte, which mitigates Mn dissolution and accounts for enhanced efficiency upon cycling. These findings demonstrate that configurational entropy is a powerful design parameter for achieving robust, high-performance P2-type layered cathodes and provide clear guidelines for entropy-assisted materials engineering in next-generation NIBs.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/3011587
