Abstract

Sodium ion batteries are considered as one of the most promising energy storage devices as lithium ion batteries due to the natural abundance of sodium. TiO2 is very popular as anode materials for both lithium and sodium ion batteries because of the nontoxicity, safety and great stabilities. However, the low electronic conductivities and inferior sodium ion diffusion make it becoming a great challenge to develop advanced TiO2 anodes. Doping heteroatoms and incorporation of defects are believed to be great ways to improve the electrochemical performance of TiO2 anodes. In this work, commercial TiO2 (P25) nanoparticles was modified by hydrogen and nitrogen high-power plasma resulting in a disordered surface layer formation and nitrogen doping as well. The electrochemical performances of the samples as anode materials for sodium ion batteries was measured and the results indicated that after the hydrogen–nitrogen plasma treatment, H–N-TiO2 electrode shows a 43.5% of capacity higher than the P-TiO2 after 400 cycles long-term discharge/charge process, and the samples show a good long cycling stability as well, the Coulombic efficiencies of all samples are nearly 99% after 50 cycles which could be sustained to the end of long cycling. In addition, hydrogen–nitrogen plasma treated TiO2 electrode reached the stable high Coulombic efficiency earlier than the pristine material. High resolution TEM images and XPS results indicate that there is a disordered surface layer formed after the plasma treatment, by which defects (oxygen vacancies) and N-doping are also introduced into the crystalline structure. All these contribute to the enhancement of the electrochemical performance.

Highlights

  • Sodium ion batteries are considered as one of the most promising energy storage devices as lithium ion batteries due to the natural abundance of sodium. ­TiO2 is very popular as anode materials for both lithium and sodium ion batteries because of the nontoxicity, safety and great stabilities

  • We developed a combination of hydrogen and nitrogen plasma assisted strategy to synthesize nitrogen doping and defect-rich T­ iO2 electrode that demonstrated an enhanced performance as anode material of sodium ion batteries

  • The high-resolution images of transmission electron microscopy shown that there is a disordered surface layer was formed after the plasma treated materials, no matter the hydrogen or nitrogen plasma process

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Summary

Introduction

Sodium ion batteries are considered as one of the most promising energy storage devices as lithium ion batteries due to the natural abundance of sodium. ­TiO2 is very popular as anode materials for both lithium and sodium ion batteries because of the nontoxicity, safety and great stabilities. We developed a combination of hydrogen and nitrogen plasma assisted strategy to synthesize nitrogen doping and defect-rich (oxygen vacancies) T­ iO2 electrode that demonstrated an enhanced performance as anode material of sodium ion batteries.

Results
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