Abstract

As demands for energy storage are ever-increasing, sodium ion batteries (SIB) have been widely conducted for superior electrochemical performance and reduction in cost compared to lithium ion batteries (LIBs), one of the most commonly used energy storage devices nowadays. Among all the parts in batteries, cathode materials play a crucial role with regard to performance. Here, layered transition metal oxides (LTMOs) (NaxTMO2, TM = Cu, Mn, Fe, Ti, Co, Cr, Ni, etc.) have kept catching researchers’ eyes due to their mature developments in commercial LIBs over decades.P2-type Ni/Mn-based LTMOs (such as Na0.67Ni0.33Mn0.67O2, NNMO) exhibit high theoretical specific capacity (~173 mAh g− 1) with environmentally friendly and cheap elements. However, they show limited stability upon charging over 4.2 V, directly restricting their energy density and lowering operating voltage. Besides, disadvantages such as poor rate performance and air/moisture sensitivity are remaining improvements for commercialization. Hence, our study mainly focuses on improvements for shortages of NNMO by applying a facile cation-and-anion co-doping strategy. Via transition metal Cu ion doping, the cycling stability of NNMO can be improved without sacrificing too much capacity, and the air stability can also be improved. In addition, F doping to replace oxygen can further enhance the structural stability and increase the rate performance by modifying interlayer spacing of the layered structure. A facile sol-gel method with heat treatment is used to synthesize cation-and-anion co-doped NNMO. The material characterization shows successful synthesis after cation and anion doping. In addition, the long cycle test shows that capacity retention increases from ~50% to ~90% over 100 cycles after Cu doping. The specific discharge capacity also increases from ~110 mAh/g to ~130 mAh/g at 0.1C with a slight increase in cycle retention from ~75% to ~77% after F doping. Also, the capacity at 20C could be maintained at ~50 mAh/g, around 45% of the initial capacity at 0.1C. The detailed charge storage mechanism will be studied by applying operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy and ex-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. As for the moisture sensitivity part, the XRD spectra indicate that no noticeable structural changes or impurity formation occurred after air exposure for one month, showing good air stability. Furthermore, operando XRD is conducted to confirm structural reversibility during charging and discharging.In summary, by applying a simple Cu/F co-doping strategy, Na0.67Ni0.13Cu0.20Mn0.67O2-xFx exhibits sufficient cycle stability for over 100 cycles as well as excellent rate capability even at a high current density of 20C, which proves itself a promising candidate as high-performance cathode material in SIBs. In addition, the cheap and environmentally friendly elemental usage (Ni, Mn and Cu) and air-stability enhancement also increase possibility of this material for large-scale energy storage application in industry.

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