Herein, the electrochemical performance and the mechanism of potassium insertion/deinsertion in orthorhombic V_(2)O_(5) nanoparticles are studied. The V2O5 electrode displays an initial potassiation/depotassiation cap...Herein, the electrochemical performance and the mechanism of potassium insertion/deinsertion in orthorhombic V_(2)O_(5) nanoparticles are studied. The V2O5 electrode displays an initial potassiation/depotassiation capacity of 200 mAh g^(−1)/217 mAh g^(−1) in the voltage range 1.5–4.0 V vs. K^(+)/K at C/12 rate, suggesting fast kinetics for potassium insertion/deinsertion. However, the capacity quickly fades during cycling, reaching 54 mAh g^(−1) at the 31st cycle. Afterwards, the capacity slowly increases up to 80 mAh g^(−1) at the 200th cycle. The storage mechanism upon K ions insertion into V2O5 is elucidated. In operando synchrotron diffraction reveals that V_(2)O_(5) first undergoes a solid solution to form K_(0.6)V_(2)O_(5) phase and then, upon further K ions insertion, it reveals coexistence of a solid solution and a two-phase reaction. During K ions deinsertion, the coexistence of solid solution and the two-phase reaction is identified together with an irreversible process. In operando XAS confirms the reduction/oxidation of vanadium during the K insertion/extraction with some irreversible contributions. This is consistent with the results obtained from synchrotron diffraction, ex situ Raman, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Moreover, ex situ XPS confirms the “cathode electrolyte interphase” (CEI) formation on the electrode and the decomposition of CEI film during cycling.展开更多
基金This work contributes to the research performed at CELEST(Center for Electrochemical Energy Storage Ulm-Karlsruhe)and was funded by the German Research Foundation(DFG)under Project ID 390874152(POLiS Cluster of Excellence)Our research work has gained benefit from beamtime allocation(2017092405-qfu)at BL04-MSPD at ALBA Synchrotron,Barcelona,Spain and(I-20170977)at PETRA-III beamline P65 at DESY,Hamburg,Germany.The in operando XAS work was performed by using the Biologic potentiostat of PETRA-Ⅲ beamline P02.1.We thank Dr.Francois Fauth from Experiments Division at ALBA for his technical help during synchrotron diffraction measurement.We appreciate Dr.Anna-Lena Hansen(IAM-ESS)for the helpful discussion regarding to the crystal sturcture of V_(2)O_(5).Dr.Kristina Pfeifer(IAM-ESS),Dr.Noha Sabi(IAM-ESS),and Dr.Thomas Bergfeldt(IAM-AWP)are gratefully acknowledged for SEM/EDX,FTIR,and ICP-OES measurements,respectively.The TEM characterization was carried out at the Karlsruhe Nano Micro Facility(KNMF),a Helmholtz research infrastructure operated at the KIT.
文摘Herein, the electrochemical performance and the mechanism of potassium insertion/deinsertion in orthorhombic V_(2)O_(5) nanoparticles are studied. The V2O5 electrode displays an initial potassiation/depotassiation capacity of 200 mAh g^(−1)/217 mAh g^(−1) in the voltage range 1.5–4.0 V vs. K^(+)/K at C/12 rate, suggesting fast kinetics for potassium insertion/deinsertion. However, the capacity quickly fades during cycling, reaching 54 mAh g^(−1) at the 31st cycle. Afterwards, the capacity slowly increases up to 80 mAh g^(−1) at the 200th cycle. The storage mechanism upon K ions insertion into V2O5 is elucidated. In operando synchrotron diffraction reveals that V_(2)O_(5) first undergoes a solid solution to form K_(0.6)V_(2)O_(5) phase and then, upon further K ions insertion, it reveals coexistence of a solid solution and a two-phase reaction. During K ions deinsertion, the coexistence of solid solution and the two-phase reaction is identified together with an irreversible process. In operando XAS confirms the reduction/oxidation of vanadium during the K insertion/extraction with some irreversible contributions. This is consistent with the results obtained from synchrotron diffraction, ex situ Raman, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Moreover, ex situ XPS confirms the “cathode electrolyte interphase” (CEI) formation on the electrode and the decomposition of CEI film during cycling.