Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/8026
Title: Catalyzing the Intercalation Storage Capacity of Aqueous Zinc-Ion Battery Constructed with Zn(II) Preinserted Organo-Vanadyl Hybrid Cathode
Authors: Pakhira, Srimanta
Keywords: Cathodes;Charge transfer;Density functional theory;Electric discharges;Electronic structure;Ethylene;Ions;organic-inorganic materials;Process control;Secondary batteries;Stability;Vanadium compounds;Charge transfer resistance;Diffusion-controlled process;Discharge capacities;Hybrid density functional theory;Organic-inorganic hybrid materials;Specific capacities;Structural stabilities;Thermodynamically stable;Zinc compounds
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Citation: Nagaraj, R., Pakhira, S., Aruchamy, K., Yadav, P., Mondal, D., Dharmalingm, K., . . . Ghosh, D. (2020). Catalyzing the intercalation storage capacity of aqueous zinc-ion battery constructed with zn(II) preinserted organo-vanadyl hybrid cathode. ACS Applied Energy Materials, 3(4), 3425-3434. doi:10.1021/acsaem.9b02466
Abstract: This article reports the first instance of exploring a chemically Zn(II) preinserted organic-inorganic hybrid material [vanadyl ethylene glycolate or VEG, (VO(CH2O)2)] as an efficient cathode for rechargeable zinc-ion batteries (ZIBs). The control VEG electrode synthesized by a glycothermal process showed a modest specific capacity of 157 mAh/g at 0.1 A/g current density, however, suffered from poor rate capability and cycle stability due to structural dissolution. Chemically Zn(II) preinsertion into VEG (Zn-VEG) catalyzed the Zn2+ intercalation in the Zn-VEG cathode with a significantly decreased charge transfer resistance, resulting in high discharge capacity of 217 mAh/g (at 0.1 A/g) accompanied by excellent rate capability with ∼50% capacity retention on increasing the current by 50 times. A first-principles-based hybrid density-functional theory (DFT) study revealed that the electronic structure of the Zn-intercalated VEG is thermodynamically stable, indicating an energetically favorable Zn-ion intercalation process. The Zn(II) preinserted VEG cathode allowed faster ionic diffusion (DZn2+ in the order of 10-9 cm2/s), and the diffusion controlled process was the major contributor (∼66.9%) to the overall capacity at low scan rate (0.1 mV/s) and remained significant (43.8%) even at high scan rate of 0.8 mV/s. Furthermore, the Zn(II) preinsertion in the VEG could act as a bridge to hold the VEG layers firmly. This provides the desired structural stability to the Zn-VEG cathode during a continuous Zn2+ insertion/deinsertion process, resulting in excellent cycle stability with only ∼0.005% capacity loss per cycle over 2000 cycles (at 4 A/g) while maintaining a high columbic efficiency of 99.9% throughout the cycles. The high capacity accompanied by excellent rate capability and cycle stability supports the as-prepared Zn(II) preinserted organo-vanadyl hybrid electrode to be a potential cathode material for ZIBs. © 2020 American Chemical Society.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsaem.9b02466
https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/8026
ISSN: 2574-0962
Type of Material: Journal Article
Appears in Collections:Department of Physics

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