Abstract
Abstract To elucidate the effects of Fe on the Ti–V-based hydrogen storage electrode alloys, the Ti 0.8 Zr 0.2 V 2.7− x Mn 0.5 Cr 0.8 Ni 1.0 Fe x ( x = 0.0–0.5) alloys were prepared and their structures and electrochemical properties were systematically investigated. XRD results show that all the alloys consist of a C14 Laves phase with hexagonal structure and a V-based solid solution phase with bcc structure. With increasing Fe content, the abundance of the C14 Laves phase gradually decreases from 43.4 wt% ( x = 0.0) to 28.5 wt% ( x = 0.5), on the contrary, that of the V-based solid solution phase monotonously increases from 56.6 wt% to 71.5 wt%. In addition, SEM observation finds that the grain size of the V-based solid solution phase is first gradually reduced and then enlarged with increasing x . Electrochemical investigations indicate that the substitution of Fe for V markedly improves the cycling stability and the high rate dischargeability of the alloy electrodes, but decreases the maximum discharge capacity and the activation performance. Further electrochemical impedance spectra, the linear polarization curve and the potentiostatic step discharge measurements reveal that the electrochemical kinetics of the alloy electrodes should be jointly controlled by the charge-transfer reaction rate on the alloy surface and the hydrogen diffusion rate in the bulk of the alloys. For the alloy electrodes with the lower Fe content ( x = 0.0–0.2), the hydrogen diffusion in the bulk of the alloys should be the rate-determining step of its discharge process, and while x increases from 0.3 to 0.5, the charge-transfer reaction on the alloy surface becomes to the rate-determining step, which induces that the electrochemical kinetics of the alloy electrodes is firstly improved and then decreased with increasing Fe content.
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