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      Structural evolution of high energy density V3+/V4+ mixed valent Na3V2O2x(PO4)2F3−2x (x = 0.8) sodium vanadium fluorophosphate using in situ synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction

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          Abstract

          The first time-resolved in situ synchrotron XRD study of a cathode in a functioning sodium-ion battery. We determine the reaction mechanism, lattice parameters, sodium evolution, and the maximum sodium extraction for the fresh and precycled cell.

          Abstract

          Sodium-ion batteries have become good candidates for energy storage technology. For this purpose it is crucial to search for and optimize new electrode and electrolyte materials. Sodium vanadium fluorophosphates are considered promising cathodes but further studies are required to elucidate their electrochemical and structural behavior. Therefore, this work focuses on the time-resolved in situ synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction study of Na 3V 2O 2x(PO 4) 2F 3−2x ( x = 0.8) while electrochemically cycling. Reaction mechanism evolution, lattice parameters and sodium evolution, and the maximum possible sodium extraction under the applied electrochemical constraints, are some of the features that have been determined for both a fresh and an offline pre-cycled cell. The reaction mechanism evolution undergoes a solid solution reaction with a two-phase region for the first lower-potential plateau while a predominantly solid solution behavior is observed for the second higher-potential plateau. Lattice and volume evolution is clearly dependent on the Na insertion/extraction mechanism, the sodium occupancy and distribution amongst the two crystallographic sites, and the electrochemical cycling history. The comparison between the fresh and the pre-cycled cell shows that there is a Na site preference depending on the cell and history and that Na swaps from one site to the other during cycling. This suggests sodium site occupancy and mobility in the tunnels is interchangeable and fluid, a favorable characteristic for a cathode in a sodium-ion battery.

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          Room-temperature stationary sodium-ion batteries for large-scale electric energy storage

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            Optimized LiFePO[sub 4] for Lithium Battery Cathodes

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              A new high-energy cathode for a Na-ion battery with ultrahigh stability.

              Large-scale electric energy storage is a key enabler for the use of renewable energy. Recently, the room-temperature Na-ion battery has been rehighlighted as an alternative low-cost technology for this application. However, significant challenges such as energy density and long-term stability must be addressed. Herein, we introduce a novel cathode material, Na1.5VPO4.8F0.7, for Na-ion batteries. This new material provides an energy density of ~600 Wh kg(-1), the highest value among cathodes, originating from both the multielectron redox reaction (1.2 e(-) per formula unit) and the high potential (~3.8 V vs Na(+)/Na) of the tailored vanadium redox couple (V(3.8+)/V(5+)). Furthermore, an outstanding cycle life (~95% capacity retention for 100 cycles and ~84% for extended 500 cycles) could be achieved, which we attribute to the small volume change (2.9%) upon cycling, the smallest volume change among known Na intercalation cathodes. The open crystal framework with two-dimensional Na diffusional pathways leads to low activation barriers for Na diffusion, enabling excellent rate capability. We believe that this new material can bring the low-cost room-temperature Na-ion battery a step closer to a sustainable large-scale energy storage system.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JMCAET
                J. Mater. Chem. A
                J. Mater. Chem. A
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2050-7488
                2050-7496
                2014
                2014
                : 2
                : 21
                : 7766-7779
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Departamento de Química Inorgánica
                [2 ]Universidad del País Vasco UPV/EHU
                [3 ]Bilbao, Spain
                [4 ]CIC ENERGIGUNE
                [5 ]Parque Tecnológico de Álava
                [6 ]Australian Synchrotron
                [7 ]Clayton, Australia
                [8 ]School of Chemistry
                [9 ]The University of New South Wales
                [10 ]Sydney NSW 2052, Australia
                Article
                10.1039/C4TA00773E
                502d9f0e-bf9a-4ec8-ad61-ef2fe09734bb
                © 2014
                History

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