MXene-Derived Potassium-Preintercalated Bilayered Vanadium Oxide Nanostructures for Cathodes in Nonaqueous K-Ion Batteries.

ACS Appl Nano Mater

Materials Electrochemistry Group, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, United States.

Published: April 2025


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Article Abstract

Bilayered vanadium oxides (BVOs) are promising cathode materials for beyond-Li-ion batteries due to their tunable chemistries and high theoretical capacities. However, the large size of beyond-Li ions limits electrochemical cycling and rate capability of BVO electrodes. Recent reports of MXene-derived BVOs with nanoscale flower-like morphology have shown improved electrochemical stability at high rates up to 5C in nonaqueous lithium-ion batteries. Here, we report how morphological stabilization can lead to improved rate capability in potassium-ion batteries (PIBs) through the synthesis and electrochemical characterization of MXene-derived K-preintercalated BVOs (MD-KVOs), which were derived from two VCT precursor materials prepared using two different etching protocols. We show that the etching conditions affect the surface chemistry of the MXene, which plays a role in the MXene-to-oxide transformation process. MXene derived from a milder etchant transformed into a nanoflower MD-KVO with two-dimensional (2D) nanosheet petals (KVO-DMAE) while a more aggressive etchant produced a MXene that transformed into a MD-KVO with one-dimensional (1D) nanorod morphology (KVO-CMAE). Electrochemical cycling of the produced MD-KVOs after drying at 200 °C under vacuum (KVO-DMAE-200 and KVO-CMAE-200) in PIBs showed that electrochemical stability of MD-KVO at high rates improved through the morphological stabilization of 2D particles combined with the control of interlayer water and K ion content. Structure refinement of KVO-DMAE-200 further corroborates the behavior observed during K ion cycling, connecting structural and compositional characteristics to the improved rate capability. This work demonstrates how proper synthetic methodology can cause downstream effects in the control of structure, chemical composition, and morphology of nanostructured layered oxide materials, which is necessary for development of future materials for beyond-Li-ion battery technologies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12012740PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.5c00175DOI Listing

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