| Literature DB >> 27933819 |
Naoaki Yabuuchi1,2,3, Issei Ikeuchi1, Kei Kubota1,2, Shinichi Komaba1,2.
Abstract
Thermal stability and phase transition processes of NaCrO2 and Na0.5CrO2 are carefully examined by high-temperature synchrotron X-ray diffraction method. O3-type NaCrO2 shows anisotropic thermal expansion on heating, which is a common character as layered materials, without phase transition in the temperature range of 27-527 °C. In contrast, for the desodiated phase, in-plane distorted P3-type layered oxide (P'3 Na0.5CrO2), phase transition occurs in the following order. Monoclinic distortion associated with Na/vacancy ordering is gradually lost on heating, and its symmetry increases and changes to a rhombohedral lattice at 207 °C. On further heating, phase segregation to two P3 layered metastable phases, which have different interlayer distances (17.0 and 13.5 Å, presumably sodium-rich and sodium-free P3 phases, respectively) are observed on heating to 287-477 °C, but oxygen loss is not observed. Oxygen loss is observed at temperatures only above 500 °C, resulting in the formation of corundum-type Cr2O3 and O3 NaCrO2 as thermodynamically stable phases. From these results, possibility of NaxCrO2 as a positive electrode material for safe rechargeable sodium batteries is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: chromium oxide; high-temperature X-ray diffraction; phase transition; sodium battery; thermal stability
Year: 2016 PMID: 27933819 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.6b09280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229