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Reconfiguring Sodium Intercalation Process of TiS2Electrode for Sodium-Ion Batteries by a Partial Solvent Cointercalation

Cited 7 time in Web of Science Cited 8 time in Scopus
Authors

Park, Jooha; Kim, Sung Joo; Lim, Kyungmi; Cho, Jiung; Kang, Kisuk

Issue Date
2022-10
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
ACS Energy Letters, Vol.7 No.10, pp.3718-3726
Abstract
© 2022 American Chemical Society.Titanium disulfide (TiS2), a first-generation cathode in lithium batteries, has also attracted a broad interest as a sodium-ion battery electrode due to fast sodium intercalation kinetics and large theoretical capacity. However, the reversibility of sodium de/intercalation is far inferior to that of lithium because of the unfavorable intermediate phase formation. Herein, we demonstrate that reconfiguring sodium intercalation via partial solvent cointercalation alters the phase-transition paths for the entire reactions of NaxTiS2 (0 < x < 1), detouring the formation of the unfavorable intermediates. Additionally, it unexpectedly results in a remarkable enhancement of sodium intercalation reversibility, boosting the cycle stability (1000 cycles) accompanying high power capability (10C rate). Comparative investigations reveal that the sodium intercalation in ether-based electrolyte involves a preintercalation of solvent molecules, which is subsequently dissimilar to the bare sodium intercalation in conventional electrolytes. Rediscovery of the intercalation behavior of TiS2 offers a new insight in revisiting the reversibility and kinetics of the commonly known electrodes for batteries.
ISSN
2380-8195
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/189423
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsenergylett.2c01838
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