Sodium intercalation/de-intercalation mechanism in Na4MnV(PO4)3 cathode materials
| Author | Nisar U. |
| Author | Shakoor R.A. |
| Author | Essehli R. |
| Author | Amin R. |
| Author | Orayech B. |
| Author | Ahmad Z. |
| Author | Kumar P.R. |
| Author | Kahraman R. |
| Author | Al-Qaradawi S. |
| Author | Soliman A. |
| Available date | 2019-11-03T11:47:37Z |
| Publication Date | 2018 |
| Publication Name | Electrochimica Acta |
| Resource | Scopus |
| ISSN | 134686 |
| Abstract | Na4MnV(PO4)3 is a sodium ion conducting material with a NASICON type crystal structure. This phase is not much known as an electrode material. The present work focuses on the sodium ion intercalation/de-intercalation mechanism and charge/discharge behavior of the material. The Na4MnV(PO4)3 is synthesized through a sol-gel process and characterized by XRD, SEM, and XPS. The structural analysis confirms the formation of a phase pure crystalline material with nanometric particle size which adopts a trigonal crystal structure. Galvanostatic intermittent titration technique (GITT) measurements indicate that Na4MnV(PO4)3 is electrochemically active having slanting voltage plateaus. Ex-situ and In-situ XRD analysis, as a function of sodium concentration, indicate that the intercalation/de-intercalation of sodium is associated with a single-phase reaction rather than a biphasic reaction when cycled between 1.5 and 4.5 V. The electrochemical measurements on composite electrodes, Na4MnV(PO4)3/CNTS (1 & 3 wt.%), show promising charge/discharge capacity (?140 mAh/g), good cyclability (100% capacity retention after 40 cycles) and reasonable rate capability. The cyclic voltammetry (CV) and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) analyses indicate that the main contributions towards the activity of Na4MnV(PO4)3 can be attributed to the active of Mn2+/Mn3+ and V3+/V4+ redox couple with partial activity of V4+/V5+. The obtained results suggest that Na4MnV(PO4)3 is a promising electrode material which can be achieved better rate performance with long cycling stability and battery performance through engineering of the particle morphology and microstructure. |
| Sponsor | The authors acknowledge the financial support from the Center for Advanced Materials (CAM), Qatar University, Doha, Qatar. The authors would also like to thank Mar�a J�uregui and Damien Saurel from XRD platform at CIC Energigune for her help for the in situ-XRD measurements. Appendix A |
| Language | en |
| Publisher | Elsevier Ltd |
| Subject | Cathode materials Charge/discharge capacity Crystal structure In-situ XRD analysis Intercalation/de-intercalation Sodium ion batteries |
| Type | Article |
| Pagination | 98 - 106 |
| Volume Number | 292 |
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