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Understanding Charge Storage in Hydrated Layered Solids MOPO4 (M = V, Nb) with Tunable Interlayer Chemistry
Author(s) -
Yue Zhu,
Yumin Qian,
Zhengyu Ju,
Yujin Ji,
Yushan Yan,
Yuanyue Liu,
Guihua Yu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.0c06193
Subject(s) - ion , electrochemistry , nanosheet , materials science , chemical physics , electrochemical energy storage , structural stability , nanotechnology , molecule , energy storage , chemical engineering , electrode , chemistry , supercapacitor , thermodynamics , organic chemistry , power (physics) , physics , structural engineering , engineering
Hydrated layered solids are interesting charge storage hosts with potentially high electrochemical activity and interlayer tunability. Although it is often possible to tune their interlayer distance by a pillaring strategy, the poor electrochemical stability of such artificial structures remains a major issue in device operation. Here we investigate the charge storage properties of MOPO 4 (M = V, Nb) hydrates with a nanosheet morphology to understand the influence of the interlayer environment on cycling stability, as well as ion selectivity. While in hydrated VOPO 4 interlayer H 2 O molecules act as compressible springs to enable fast Li-/Na-ion transport kinetics and reasonable structural reversibility, NbOPO 4 layers with bridging PO 4 groups serving as permanent linkers exhibit highly stable cyclability for Li-ions, owing to a zero-volume-change ion transport process. However, the latter suffers from a much larger migration energy barrier for Na-ions. Our findings not only highlight a structurally intriguing material system, but also provide insights into reviving materials with an originally unstable interlayer chemical environment, and shed light on the design principles for creating electrochemically stable charge storage hosts.

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