Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Robust Pseudocapacitive Sodium Cation Intercalation Induced by Cobalt Vacancies at Atomically Thin Co<sub>1−<i>x</i></sub>Se<sub>2</sub>/Graphene Heterostructure for Sodium‐Ion Batteries

119

Citations

43

References

2021

Year

Abstract

Electronic structure engineering on electrode materials could bring in a new mechanism to achieve high energy and high power densities in sodium ion batteries. Herein, we design and create Co vacancies at the interface of atomically thin CoSe<sub>2</sub> /graphene heterostructure and obtain Co<sub>1-x</sub> Se<sub>2</sub> /graphene heterostructure electrode materials that facilitate significant Na<sup>+</sup> intercalation pseudocapacitance. Density functional theory (DFT) calculation suggests that the Na<sup>+</sup> adsorption energy is dramatically increased, and the Na<sup>+</sup> diffusion barrier is remarkably reduced due to the introduction of Co vacancy. The optimized electrode delivers a superior capacity of 673.6 mAh g<sup>-1</sup> at 0.1 C, excellent rate capability of 576.5 mAh g<sup>-1</sup> at 2.0 C and ultra-long life up to 2000 cycles. Kinetics analysis indicates that the enhanced Na<sup>+</sup> storage is mainly attributed to the intercalation pseudocapacitance induced by Co vacancies. This work suggests that the creation of cation vacancy could bestow heterostructured electrode materials with pseudocapacitive Na<sup>+</sup> intercalation for high-capacity and high-rate energy storage.

References

YearCitations

Page 1