Abstract

Layered Nax MO2 cathodes are of immense interest as rechargeable sodium batteries further their development as a lithium-ion battery alternative. However, two primary intrinsic structural issues hinder their practicality—sodium ordering and transition-metal layer gliding during cycling. These phenomena plague the electrochemical profiles of these materials with several unwanted voltage plateaus. A Na+ and Fe3+ substitution for Ni2+ strategy is employed here to obtain a series of Na3+x Ni2–2x Fe x SbO6 (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.5) materials to suppress the structural phenomena that are apparent in O’3-layered Na3Ni2SbO6 cathode material. This strategy is successful in obtaining a sloping voltage curve without distinct plateaus—an indication of suppression of the underlying structural phenomena that cause them—at doping concentrations of x ≥ 0.3. The first-cycle coulombic efficiency of the doped compounds is much greater than the starting compound, presumably owing to a kinetic barrier to reforming the full O’3-layered starting materials within the voltage range of 2.5–4.3 V vs Na+/Na. Sodium doping into the MO2 layer thus remains a promising strategy for enabling commercial Na x MO2 cathodes, but further development is required to lower the kinetic barrier for sodium reinsertion into these materials in a useful voltage range to maximize their reversible capacity.

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