Abstract

Zinc-ion batteries (ZIBs) have attracted tremendous interest from the scientific community in recent years due to their extreme safety, cost-effectiveness, environmental benignity and the unique properties of the Zn anode. However, more suitable cathode materials are needed to achieve their potential widespread applications. MoS2, a 2D layered material with fascinating properties, could also serve as a cathode in ZIBs but is rarely studied due to its limited interlayer spacing, poor ionic/electronic conductivity and hydrophobicity. In this work, we report a facile hydrothermal method for synthesizing crystal water-intercalated MoS2 nanosheets and their application in efficient Zn-ion storage. Morphological characterization reveals the average thickness of the nanosheets to be 15.2 nm. With a large interlayer spacing (0.79 nm), high 1T content (49.7%) and high defects, MoS2·nH2O achieves a high discharge capacity of 197 mA h g-1 at 0.1 A g-1 in an aqueous 2 M ZnSO4 electrolyte. Moreover, it exhibits modest cyclic stability with 55% capacity retention after 1000 charge/discharge cycles. Furthermore, we evaluated the charge storage kinetics of crystal water-intercalated MoS2 nanosheets and realized that the electrochemical reaction is diffusion dominated with a diffusion coefficient of 10-10 to 10-13 cm2 s-1 in a 0.3 to 1.3 V potential window. This simple and cost-effective strategy for improving the performance of ZIBs by crystal water intercalation in 2D cathode materials will pave the way for their commercial-level grid-scale applications.

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