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Nanostructured Bilayered Vanadium Oxide Electrodes for Rechargeable Sodium-Ion Batteries
345
Citations
27
References
2011
Year
Materials ScienceShort-range OrderChemical EngineeringRechargeable Sodium-ion BatteriesVanadium OxideEngineeringNanotechnologyElectrochemical Power SourceAdvanced Electrode MaterialCathode MaterialsSodium-ion BatteriesEnergy StorageElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteriesTailored NanoarchitecturesSodium BatteryElectrochemistry
Tailoring nanoarchitecture of materials offers unprecedented opportunities in utilization of their functional properties. Nanostructures of vanadium oxide, synthesized by electrochemical deposition, are studied as a cathode material for rechargeable Na-ion batteries. Ex situ and in situ synchrotron characterizations revealed the presence of an electrochemically responsive bilayered structure with adjustable intralayer spacing that accommodates intercalation of Na(+) ions. Sodium intake induces organization of overall structure with appearance of both long- and short-range order, while deintercalation is accompanied with the loss of long-range order, whereas short-range order is preserved. Nanostructured electrodes achieve theoretical reversible capacity for Na(2)V(2)O(5) stochiometry of 250 mAh/g. The stability evaluation during charge-discharge cycles at room temperature revealed an efficient 3 V cathode material with superb performance: energy density of ~760 Wh/kg and power density of 1200 W/kg. These results demonstrate feasibility of development of the ambient temperature Na-ion rechargeable batteries by employment of electrodes with tailored nanoarchitectures.
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