%0 Journal Article %T First-Principles Study of Lithium Cobalt Spinel Oxides: Correlating Structure and Electrochemistry %J - %D 2018 %R https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.8b00394 %X Embedding a lithiated cobalt oxide spinel (Li2Co2O4, or LiCoO2) component or a nickel-substituted LiCo1每xNixO2 analogue in structurally integrated cathodes such as xLi2MnO3﹞(1每x)LiM∩O2 (M∩ = Ni/Co/Mn) has been recently proposed as an approach to advance the performance of lithium-ion batteries. Here, we first revisit the phase stability and electrochemical performance of LiCoO2 synthesized at different temperatures using density functional theory calculations. Consistent with previous studies, we find that the occurrence of low- and high-temperature structures (i.e., cubic lithiated spinel LT-LiCoO2; or Li2Co2O4 (Fd3ˋm) vs trigonal-layered HT-LiCoO2 (R3ˋm), respectively) can be explained by a small difference in the free energy between these two compounds. Additionally, the observed voltage profile of a Li/LiCoO2 cell for both cubic and trigonal phases of LiCoO2, as well as the migration barrier for lithium diffusion from an octahedral (Oh) site to a tetrahedral site (Td) in Fd3ˋm LT-Li1每xCoO2, has been calculated to help understand the complex electrochemical charge/discharge processes. A search of LiCoxM1每xO2 lithiated spinel (M = Ni or Mn) structures and compositions is conducted to extend the exploration of the chemical space of Li每Co每Mn每Ni每O electrode materials. We predict a new lithiated spinel material, LiNi0.8125Co0.1875O2 (Fd3ˋm), with a composition close to that of commercial, layered LiNi0.8Co0.15Al0.05O2, which may have the potential for exploitation in structurally integrated, layered spinel cathodes for next-generation lithium-ion batteries %U https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.8b00394