Abstract

After momentary attention as potential battery materials during the 1980s, sodium titanium disulphides, like the whole Na–Ti–S system, have only been investigated in a slapdash fashion. While they pop up in current reviews on the very subject time and again, little is known about their actual crystal-structural features and sodium-ion diffusion within them. Herein, we present a short summary of literature on the Na–Ti–S system, a new synthesis route to Na0.5TiS2-3R1, and results of high-temperature X-ray and neutron diffractometry on this polytype, which is stable for medium sodium content. Based thereon, we propose a revision of the crystal structure reported in earlier literature (missed inversion symmetry). Analyses of framework topology, probability-density functions, and maps of the scattering-length density reconstructed using maximum-entropy methods (all derived from neutron diffraction) reveal a honeycomb-like conduction pattern with linear pathways between adjacent sodium positions; one-particle potentials indicate associated activation barriers of ca. 0.1 eV or less. These findings are complemented by elemental analyses and comments on the high-temperature polytype Na0.9TiS2-2H. Our study helps to get a grip on structural complexity in the intercalates NaxTiS2, caused by the interplay of layer stacking and Na–Ti–vacancy ordering, and provides first experimental results on pathways and barriers of sodium-ion migration.

Highlights

  • Layered lithium-ion conductors are a successful substance class for energy storage, e.g., in modern consumer electronics

  • We present a short summary of literature on the Na–Ti–S system, a new synthesis route to Na0.5TiS2-3R1, and results of high-temperature X-ray and neutron diffractometry on this polytype, which is stable for medium sodium content

  • Probability-density functions, and maps of the scattering-length density reconstructed using maximumentropy methods reveal a honeycomb-like conduction pattern with linear pathways between adjacent sodium positions; one-particle potentials indicate associated activation barriers of ca. 0.1 eV or less

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Summary

Introduction

Layered lithium-ion conductors are a successful substance class for energy storage, e.g., in modern consumer electronics. Alkali transition-metal dichalcogenides are not a recent focus, they pop up in current reviews time and again.[1] Probably as analogues of the once front-running lithium intercalates LixTiS2, the sodium compounds NaxTiS2 received some attention in the early to mid-1980s, leading to an overall manageable corpus of literature on the Na–Ti–S system. They have sparked some commercial interest, manifested in patents, as thermoelectrics and auxiliary materials for cathodes in sodium-ion batteries.[2,3]. The electrochemically intercalated compounds NaxTiS3 contain sulphide as well as disulphide ions and are formed from TiS3 via disulphide (instead of titanium) reduction and 27780 | RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 27780–27788

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