The Advanced Manufacturing Research Institute (AMRI) of the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), an independent administrative institution, has developed new cathode materials for secondary lithium-ion battery, based on lithium manganese oxide prepared through the ion exchange synthesis in low temperature molten salt using sodium compound, in collaboration with the Research Institute for Ubiquitous Energy Devices (RIUED), AIST. The cathode materials plays a decisive role in determining the performance of lithium secondary battery, and the newly developed materials has initial discharge current capacity 168mAh/g and discharge energy density 606mWh/g, which is comparable to most widely used materials, lithium cobalt oxide with 160mAh/g and 630mWh/g, respectively. Partial replacement of manganese with titanium upgrades the performance further to current capacity 177mAh/g and energy density 635mWh/g.
The use of secondary lithium-ion battery has been has been rapidly expanded in these days as power sources for various kinds of personal digital assistance (PDA), and is expected to be further spread into larger-sized applications such as fuel cell-driven and hybrid automobiles. While cathode materials for secondary lithium-ion battery has been so far made mostly from lithium cobalt oxide, the development of substitute materials jab been needed because of depletion in and soaring prices of cobalt resources.
The AMRI/ RIUED-AIST has been engaged in R&D works of new cathode materials by applying low temperature synthetic process, one of elevated efficiency manufacturing technologies, as a part of contract project (FY2002~2006) sponsored by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) and the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO).
The newly developed lithium manganese oxide cathode material has discharge voltage as high as 4V, which is highest among that of manganese oxide-based compounds, and 0.3V higher than that of existing lithium cobalt oxide materials. The achievements may be attributed to keeping the original crystal structure of sodium compound as starting template and preventing residual sodium from blocking lithium ion insertion/extraction, through the optimization of conditions for ion exchange synthetic process in low temperature molten salt. The application of the materials to secondary lithium-ion battery is expected to reduce the price of cathode materials to about 1/5, and that of battery by around 30%.
The subsequent efforts will be focused on further upgrading of charge-and-discharge characteristics and increasing capacity through the optimization of grain size control and chemical composition, and on establishing low cost manufacturing process. The results of the present study will be reported at the 45th Battery Symposium in Japan to be held




