Structural instability is the major obstacle in the Li2FeSiO4/C cathode during charge and discharge process, which can be improved by the substitution of cations in the host cage. In this study, the transition metal ions with different valence (Ag1+, Zn2+, Cr3+, and Ti4+) have been substituted in Li2FeSiO4/C via modified sol‐gel method and the impact on the structural, electrical, and electrochemical performances has been systematically explored. The Rietveld‐refined XRD pattern and HR‐TEM (SAED) result reveal that all the prepared samples maintain orthorhombic structure (S.G‐ Pmn21). The FE‐SEM and TEM micrographs of bare and doped Li2FeSiO4/C display nanoparticle formation with 20‐40 nm size. Among different cation‐substituted silicates, Li2Fe0.9Ti0.1SiO4/C sample exhibits an excellent total conductivity of 1.20 × 10−4 S cm−1 which is one order of magnitude higher than the bare Li2FeSiO4/C sample. The galvanostatic charge‐discharge curves and cyclic voltammetric analysis reveal that the Li2Fe0.9Ti0.1SiO4/C material provides an excellent initial specific capacity of 242 mAh g−1 and maintains a capacity of 226 mAh g−1 after 50 cycles with capacity retention of 93.38%. The Ti doping is a promising strategy to overcome the capacity fading issues, by preventing the structural collapse during Li‐ion intercalation/de‐intercalation processes in the Li2FeSiO4/C electrode through the strong hybridization between the 3d and 4s orbitals in titanium and 2p orbital in oxygen.
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