Oxygen defect chemistry for the reversible transformation of titanates for sizeable potassium storage

Cheng Yen Lao, Qiyao Yu, Jun Hu, Neng Li, Giorgio Divitini, Hyun Kyung Kim, Wei (Alex) Wang*, Yingjun Liu, Xingzhu Chen, R. Vasant Kumar

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Potassium-ion batteries (KIBs) are promising substitutes for lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) due to the earth-abundancy of potassium. However, practical KIB applications are hindered by slow diffusion kinetics and severe structural deterioration as the large cation is cycled in and out of the electrode. Here, a high-capacity electrode, oxygen-deficient loose-layered potassium titanate (LL-KTO), is synthesized to electrochemically store potassiumviaa “stacked ↔ sliced structural transformation” with net-zero structural deterioration. Owing to the positive structural energy compensation from oxygen vacancies, LL-KTO delaminates and restacks with K+ions reversibly upon charging and discharging, in contrast to rigid oxide electrodes. As a result, it achieves a capacity of 201 mA h g−1over 1800 cycles at 100 mA g−1, on par with values for titanium-oxide based LIBs. Peukert's constant, fractal dimension and host-to-guest ion ratio are further demonstrated as matrices to evaluate the performances of electrodes and show that LL-KTO with stacked ↔ sliced structural transformation pushes the kinetic boundary and approaches the thermodynamic limit of ion batteries. This work addresses the disadvantages of large ion storage by designing a new ion-storing mechanism and provides an important guide to design future energy storage systems and a method to compare electrode materials across different systems.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)17550-17557
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume8
Issue number34
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Sept 2020

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