| Literature DB >> 32649793 |
Damien Dambournet1, Christophe Legein2, Ben Morgan3, Monique Body4, Olaf Borkiewicz5, Franck Fayon6, Vincent Sarou-Kanian7, Jiwei Ma8, Peter Strasser9, Toshinari Koketsu9, Wei Xiankui10, Marc Heggen11.
Abstract
Aluminium batteries constitute a safe and sustainable high-energy-density electrochemical energy-storage solution. Viable Al-ion batteries require suitable electrode materials that can readily intercalate high-charge Al 3+ ions. Here, we investigate the Al 3+ intercalation chemistry of anatase TiO 2 and how chemical modifications influence the accommodation of Al 3+ ions. We use fluoride- and hydroxide-doping to generate high concentrations of titanium vacancies. The coexistence of these hetero-anions and titanium vacancies leads to a complex insertion mechanism, attributed to three distinct types of host sites: native interstitials sites, single vacancy sites, and paired vacancy sites. We demonstrate that Al 3+ induces a strong local distortion within the modified TiO 2 structure, which affects the insertion properties of the neighbouring host sites. Overall, specific structural features induced by the intercalation of highly-polarizing Al 3+ ions should be considered when designing new electrode materials for multivalent batteries.Entities:
Keywords: Multivalent ion batteries * 27Al and 19F solid state NMR * vacancy * local distortion * insertion mechanism
Year: 2020 PMID: 32649793 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202007983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336