| Literature DB >> 35862458 |
Aniruddha S Lakhnot1, Kevin Bhimani1, Varad Mahajani2, Reena A Panchal1, Shyam Sharma1, Nikhil Koratkar1,2.
Abstract
Looming concerns regarding scarcity, high prices, and safety threaten the long-term use of lithium in energy storage devices. Calcium has been explored in batteries because of its abundance and low cost, but the larger size and higher charge density of calcium ions relative to lithium impairs diffusion kinetics and cyclic stability. In this work, an aqueous calcium-ion battery is demonstrated using orthorhombic, trigonal, and tetragonal polymorphs of molybdenum vanadium oxide (MoVO) as a host for calcium ions. Orthorhombic and trigonal MoVOs outperform the tetragonal structure because large hexagonal and heptagonal tunnels are ubiquitous in such crystals, providing facile pathways for calcium-ion diffusion. For trigonal MoVO, a specific capacity of ∼203 mAh g-1 was obtained at 0.2C and at a 100 times faster rate of 20C, an ∼60 mAh g-1 capacity was achieved. The open-tunnel trigonal and orthorhombic polymorphs also promoted cyclic stability and reversibility. A review of the literature indicates that MoVO provides one of the best performances reported to date for the storage of calcium ions.Entities:
Keywords: aqueous battery; calcium; complex oxides; intercalation; porosity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35862458 PMCID: PMC9335270 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2205762119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779