| Literature DB >> 28533510 |
Mengya Feng1,2, Qinghua Du1,2, Li Su1,2, Guowei Zhang1,2, Guiling Wang1,2, Zhipeng Ma1,2, Weimin Gao3, Xiujuan Qin4,5, Guangjie Shao6,7.
Abstract
Materials with a layered structure have attracted tremendous attention because of their unique properties. The ultrathin nanosheet structure can result in extremely rapid intercalation/de-intercalation of Na ions in the charge-discharge progress. Herein, we report a manganese oxide with pre-intercalated K and Na ions and having flower-like ultrathin layered structure, which was synthesized by a facile but efficient hydrothermal method under mild condition. The pre-intercalation of Na and K ions facilitates the access of electrolyte ions and shortens the ion diffusion pathways. The layered manganese oxide shows ultrahigh specific capacity when it is used as cathode material for sodium-ion batteries. It also exhibits excellent stability and reversibility. It was found that the amount of intercalated Na ions is approximately 71% of the total charge. The prominent electrochemical performance of the manganese oxide demonstrates the importance of design and synthesis of pre-intercalated ultrathin layered materials.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28533510 PMCID: PMC5440409 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02028-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1XRD patterns of the as-prepared manganese oxides.
Figure 2SEM images of (a) M0 and (b) M2, (c) TEM image of M2, (d) HR-TEM and SAED images of M2 and (e) EDS elemental mapping of M2.
Figure 3(a) Charge-discharge profiles of the as-prepared manganese oxides at 1.5 C, (b) Rate performance of M2 electrode, (c) Cycling performance of M0 and M2 electrodes at 1.5 C, and (d) Long cycling stability of M2 electrode at 50 C.
The electrochemical performance of various electrodes in aqueous electrolytes.
| Active material | Capacity (mA h g−1) | Current density | Efficiency (%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M2 | 133.8 | 1.5 C | 100 | This work |
| Na0.58MnO2·0.48H2O | 80.0 | 1 C | 60 |
|
| Na4Mn9O18 | 45 | 0.125 C | — |
|
| NaMnO2 | 60 | 1 C | 91.5 |
|
| K0.27MnO2 | 64.7 | 0.2 A g−1 | 74 |
|
| Na0.95MnO2 | 60.0 | 2 C | 92 |
|
| Na0.44MnO2 | 40 | 0.1 C | — |
|
Figure 4(a) CV curves of the as-prepared manganese oxide electrodes at scan rate of 1 mV s−1, (b) CV curves of M2 electrode at different scan rates, (c) The relationship of specific capacitance versus inverse square root of scan rate, and (d) The relationship of inverse specific capacity versus square root of scan rate.
Figure 5(a) Nyquist plots of M0 and M2 electrodes. The inset image is the corresponding equivalent circuit. (b) Relationship between Zre and ω−1/2 of M0 and M2 electrodes at low frequencies.
The derived impedance parameters of M0 and M2.
| Active material | Rs(Ω) | Rct(Ω) | Zw(Ω) |
|---|---|---|---|
| M0 | 3.8 | 18.2 | 0.079 |
| M2 | 2.0 | 12.1 | 0.018 |
Figure 6Schematic diagram of manganese oxides with different ratios of pre-intercalated Na ions.