Abstract
The relentless quest for new electrode materials for energy storage and electrochromic devices remains essential to improve current technology. Building on our previous discovery of Li2Ni2W2O9, a corundum-like compound with reversible Li+intercalation and electrochromic behavior, we report three new phases – Li2Mn2W2O9, Li2Fe2W2O9and Li2Co2W2O9– synthesized via ceramic and carbothermal reduction methods. The three phases crystallize in either the orthorhombic Pbcn or the trigonal P3̄c1 space groups and feature cationic mixing between the 3d-transition metal (Mn, Fe or Co) and Li at varying levels. These materials were characterized to investigate their unique structural features, electrochemical behavior, optical response and magnetic properties. Operando optical reflection microscopy revealed distinct light-matter interactions: Li2Fe2W2O9and Li2Mn2W2O9showed contrast changes due to volume change during Li+(de)intercalation, while Li2Co2W2O9exhibited dual optical responses dominated by either light absorption or volume change. This approach enabled us to probe and comparatively rank electrochromic efficiency across the series as: Li2Ni2W2O9> Li2Co2W2O9> Li2Mn2W2O9≫ Li2Fe2W2O9. Magnetic characterization uncovers long-range antiferromagnetic ordering in both Li2Fe2W2O9and Li2Co2W2O9, with magnetic structures proposed in the Pbc′n and refined in the Pb′c′n Shubnikov space groups, respectively. This comprehensive study reveals how transition-metal chemistry governs the interplay between electrochemical, optical, and magnetic properties in the Li2M2W2O9family, offering a tunable platform for future multifunctional energy materials.
| Original language | English |
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| Journal | Materials Chemistry Frontiers |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 5 Dec 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:This journal is © the Partner Organisations, 2025
Funding
The authors acknowledge the SOLEIL synchrotron facility for beamtime at the CRISTAL beamline, and the ANSTO neutron scattering facility for beamtime at the Echidna and Wombat diffractometers. Access to TEM facilities was granted by the Advance Imaging Core Facility of Skoltech, as well as financial support from the French National Research Agency (STORE-EX Labex Project ANR-10-LABX76-01). C. Q. thanks the Doctoral School ED 397 (Sorbonne Universite - PSL) for funding his PhD project. The authors thank Prof. Matthew Rosseinsky, Sathiya Mariyappan, Anshuman Chaupatnaik, Xu Gao, Ivette Aguilar, Elisa Grepin and Nikan Afsahi for valuable discussions and comments.
| Funders | Funder number |
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| Sorbonne Universit | Unassigned |