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1.
Chem Mater ; 36(5): 2314-2324, 2024 Mar 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38495897

ABSTRACT

Sodium-ion batteries (NIBs) can use elements that are abundantly present in Earth's crust and are technologically feasible for replacing lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). Hence, NIBs are essential components for sustainable energy storage applications. All-solid-state sodium batteries are among the most capable substitutes to LIBs because of their potential to have low price, great energy density, and consistent safety. Nevertheless, more advancements are needed to improve the electrochemical performance of the Na3V2(PO4)3 (NVP) cathode for NIBs, especially with regard to rate performance and operational lifespan. Herein, a core-shell NVP/C structure is accomplished by adopting a solid-state method. The initial reversible capacity of the NVP/C cathode is 106.6 mAh/g (current rate of C/10), which approaches the theoretical value (117.6 mAh/g). It also exhibits outstanding electrochemical characteristics with a reversible capacity of 85.3 mAh/g at 10C and a cyclic retention of roughly 94.2% after 1100 cycles. Using synchrotron-based operando X-ray diffraction, we present a complete examination of phase transitions during sodium extraction and intercalation in NVP/C. To improve safety and given its excellent ionic conductivity and broad electrochemical window, a Na superionic conductor (NASICON) solid electrolyte (Na3.16Zr1.84Y0.16Si2PO12) has been integrated to obtain an all-solid-state NVP/C||Na battery, which provides an exceptional reversible capacity (95 mAh/g at C/10) and long-term cycling stability (retention of 78.3% after 1100 cycles).

2.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 30(Pt 3): 561-570, 2023 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36952234

ABSTRACT

Operando powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) is a widely employed method for the investigation of structural evolution and phase transitions in electrodes for rechargeable batteries. Due to the advantages of high brilliance and high X-ray energies, the experiments are often carried out at synchrotron facilities. It is known that the X-ray exposure can cause beam damage in the battery cell, resulting in hindrance of the electrochemical reaction. This study investigates the extent of X-ray beam damage during operando PXRD synchrotron experiments on battery materials with varying X-ray energies, amount of X-ray exposure and battery cell chemistries. Battery cells were exposed to 15, 25 or 35 keV X-rays (with varying dose) during charge or discharge in a battery test cell specially designed for operando experiments. The observed beam damage was probed by µPXRD mapping of the electrodes recovered from the operando battery cell after charge/discharge. The investigation reveals that the beam damage depends strongly on both the X-ray energy and the amount of exposure, and that it also depends strongly on the cell chemistry, i.e. the chemical composition of the electrode.

3.
Adv Mater ; 34(10): e2110048, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34969158

ABSTRACT

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) hold great promise as high-energy anode materials for next-generation lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) due to their tunable chemistry, pore structure and abundant reaction sites. However, the pore structure of crystalline MOFs tends to collapse during lithium-ion insertion and extraction, and hence, their electrochemical performances are rather limited. As a critical breakthrough, a MOF glass anode for LIBs has been developed in the present work. In detail, it is fabricated by melt-quenching Cobalt-ZIF-62 (Co(Im)1.75 (bIm)0.25 ) to glass, and then by combining glass with carbon black and binder. The derived anode exhibits high lithium storage capacity (306 mAh g-1 after 1000 cycles at of 2 A g-1 ), outstanding cycling stability, and superior rate performance compared with the crystalline Cobalt-ZIF-62 and the amorphous one prepared by high-energy ball-milling. Importantly, it is found that the Li-ion storage capacity of the MOF glass anode continuously rises with charge-discharge cycling and even tripled after 1000 cycles. Combined spectroscopic and structural analyses, along with density functional theory calculations, reveal the origin of the cycling-induced enhancement of the performances of the MOF glass anode, that is, the increased distortion and local breakage of the CoN coordination bonds making the Li-ion intercalation sites more accessible.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 60(21): 16700-16712, 2021 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34669389

ABSTRACT

The synthesis and thermal degradation of MAl4(OH)12SO4·3H2O layered double hydroxides with M = Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+, and Zn2+ ("MAl4-LDH") were investigated by inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis, powder X-ray diffraction, Rietveld refinement, scanning electron microscopy, scanning tunnel electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, and solid-state 1H and 27Al NMR spectroscopy. Following extensive synthesis optimization, phase pure CoAl4- and NiAl4-LDH were obtained, whereas 10-12% unreacted bayerite (Al(OH)3) remained for the CuAl4-LDH. The optimum synthesis conditions are hydrothermal treatment at 120 °C for 14 days (NiAl4-LDH only 9 days) with MSO4(aq) concentrations of 1.4-2.8, 0.7-0.8, and 0.08 M for the CoAl4-, NiAl4-, and CuAl4-LDH, respectively. A pH ≈ 2 for the metal sulfate solutions is required to prevent the formation of byproducts, which were Ni(OH)2 and Cu3(SO4)(OH)4 for NiAl4- and CuAl4-LDH, respectively. The thermal degradation of the three MAl4-LDH and ZnAl4-LDH in a nitrogen atmosphere proceeds in three steps: (i) dehydration and dehydroxylation between 200 and 600 °C, (ii) loss of sulfate between 600 and 900 °C, and (iii) formation of the end products at 900-1200 °C. For CoAl4-LDH (ZnAl4-LDH), these are α-Al2O3 and CoAl2O4 (ZnAl2O4) spinel. For NiAl4-LDH, a spinel-like NiAl4O7 phase forms, whereas CuAl4-LDH degrades by a redox reaction yielding a diamagnetic CuAlO2 (delafossite structure) and α-Al2O3.

5.
Nanoscale ; 12(24): 12824-12830, 2020 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32515762

ABSTRACT

Iron(iii) hydroxide phosphate hydrate Fe1.13(PO4)(OH)0.39(H2O)0.61 is investigated for the first time as a Na-ion battery cathode, which reveals that the material exhibits similar storage capacities for Na- and Li-ions at relatively low current rates (i.e. C/10). Interestingly, operando X-ray diffraction shows that insertion of Na-ions induces a solid solution transition in the crystalline Fe1.13(PO4)(OH)0.39(H2O)0.61 end-member simultaneously with a major amorphization. This result adds to the series of observations of phosphate-based materials undergoing order-disorder transitions during Na-ion storage. Fe1.13(PO4)(OH)0.39(H2O)0.61 is thus ideal for enhancing our knowledge on such phenomena. To this end, using total X-ray scattering with pair distribution function analysis, we show that the amorphous phase is Na-rich NaxFe1.13(PO4)(OH)0.39(H2O)0.61 with the local [FeO6]-[PO4] motif retained but with coherence lengths of only ca. 0.6 nm. Our investigation also reveals that the crystallinity of Fe1.13(PO4)(OH)0.39(H2O)0.61 is regained upon Na-extraction (battery recharge), i.e. the order-disorder transition is reversible.

6.
Nanoscale ; 11(25): 12347-12357, 2019 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31215584

ABSTRACT

Nano-sized particles of rutile TiO2 is a promising material for cheap high-capacity anodes for Li-ion batteries. It is well-known that rutile undergoes an irreversible order-disorder transition upon deep discharge. However, in the disordered state, the LixTiO2 material retains a high reversible ion-storage capacity of >200 mA h g-1. Despite the promising properties of the material, the structural transition and evolution during the repeated battery operation has so far been studied only by diffraction-based methods, which only provide insight into the part that retains some long-range order. Here, we utilize a combination of ex situ and operando total scattering with pair distribution function analysis and transmission electron microscopy to investigate the atomic-scale structures of the disordered LixTiO2 forming upon the discharge of nano-rutile TiO2 as well as to elucidate the phase behavior in the material during the repeated charge-discharge process. Our investigation reveals that nano-rutile upon Li-intercalation transforms into a composite of ∼5 nm domains of a layered LixTiO2α-NaFeO2-type structure with ∼1 nm LixTiO2 grain boundaries with a columbite-like structural motif. During repeated charge-discharge cycling, the structure of this composite is retained and stores Li through a complete solid-solution transition with a remarkably small volume change of only 1 vol%.

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