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Co‐Construction of Sulfur Vacancies and Heterojunctions in Tungsten Disulfide to Induce Fast Electronic/Ionic Diffusion Kinetics for Sodium‐Ion Batteries

398

Citations

57

References

2020

Year

Abstract

Engineering novel electrode materials with unique architectures has a significant impact on tuning the structural/electrochemical properties for boosting the performance of secondary battery systems. Herein, starting from well-organized WS<sub>2</sub> nanorods, an ingenious design of a one-step method is proposed to prepare a bimetallic sulfide composite with a coaxial carbon coating layer, simply enabled by ZIF-8 introduction. Rich sulfur vacancies and WS<sub>2</sub> /ZnS heterojunctions can be simultaneously developed, that significantly improve ionic and electronic diffusion kinetics. In addition, a homogeneous carbon protective layer around the surface of the composite guarantees an outstanding structural stability, a reversible capacity of 170.8 mAh g<sup>-1</sup> after 5000 cycles at a high rate of 5 A g<sup>-1</sup> . A great potential in practical application is also exhibited, where a full cell based on the WS<sub>2-</sub> <sub>x</sub> /ZnS@C anode and the P2-Na<sub>2/3</sub> Ni<sub>1/3</sub> Mn<sub>1/3</sub> O<sub>2</sub> cathode can maintain a reversible capacity of 89.4 mAh g<sup>-1</sup> after 500 cycles at 1 A g<sup>-1</sup> . Moreover, the underlying electrochemical Na storage mechanisms are illustrated in detail by theoretical calculations, electrochemical kinetic analysis, and operando X-ray diffraction characterization.

References

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