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Anomalous interfacial stress generation during sodium intercalation/extraction in MoS <sub>2</sub> thin-film anodes

72

Citations

36

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Although the generation of mechanical stress in the anode material is suggested as a possible reason for electrode degradation and fading of storage capacity in batteries, only limited knowledge of the electrode stress and its evolution is available at present. Here, we show real-time monitoring of the interfacial stress of a few-layer MoS<sub>2</sub> system under the sodiation/desodiation process using microcantilever electrodes. During the first sodiation with a voltage plateau of 1.0 to 0.85 V, the MoS<sub>2</sub> exhibits a compressive stress (2.1 Nm<sup>-1</sup>), which is substantially smaller than that measured (9.8 Nm<sup>-1</sup>) during subsequent plateaus at 0.85 to 0.4 V due to the differential volume expansion of the MoS<sub>2</sub> film. The conversion reaction to Mo below 0.1 V generates an anomalous compressive stress of 43 Nm<sup>-1</sup> with detrimental effects. These results also suggest the existence of a separate discharge stage between 0.6 and 0.1 V, where the generated stress is only approximately one-third of that observed below 0.1 V. This approach can be adapted to help resolve the localized stress in a wide range of electrode materials, to gain additional insights into mechanical effects of charge storage, and for long-lifetime battery design.

References

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