3D Tunnel Copper Tetrathiovanadate Nanocube Cathode Achieving Ultrafast Magnesium Storage Reactions through a Charge Delocalization and Displacement Mechanism.

ACS Nano

Key Laboratory of Hydraulic Machinery Transients, Ministry of Education, School of Power and Mechanical Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, China.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rechargeable magnesium batteries show promise for energy storage due to their low cost and safety, but challenges with available cathode materials delay progress.
  • The study introduces a new cathode made of copper tetrathiovanadate (CuVS), which has a unique crystal structure aiding in magnesium cation transport and enhancing the battery's overall performance.
  • CuVS demonstrates impressive battery capacity and stability, as it maintains high performance over 1000 cycles, with a design that encourages effective chemical reactions and high electronic conductivity.

Article Abstract

Rechargeable magnesium batteries are attractive candidates for large-scale energy storage applications because of the low cost and high safety, but the scarcity and inferior performance of the cathode materials are hindering the development. In the present study, a kind of copper tetrathiovanadate (CuVS) cathode is designed and developed with a comprehensive consideration of the chemical and electronic structures. The vanadium and sulfur atoms form chemical bonds with high covalent proportion, facilitating electron delocalization via the vanadium-sulfur bonds. This reduces the interaction with the bivalent magnesium cation and induces the coredox of vanadium and sulfur. The crystal structure of CuVS has interlaced 3D tunnels for solid-state magnesium cation transport. The CuVS cathode shows a high capacity of 350 mA h g at 100 mA g, an outstanding rate performance of 67 mA h g at 10 A g, and stable cycling for 1000 cycles at 5 A g without obvious capacity fading. Prominently, a high areal mass load of 3.5 mg cm could be achieved without obvious rate capability decay, which is quite favorable to pair with the high-capacity magnesium metal anode in practical application. The mechanism investigation and theoretical computation demonstrate that CuVS undergoes first a magnesium intercalation and then a displacement reaction, during which the crystal structure is maintained, assisting the reaction reversibility and cycling stability. All the copper, vanadium, and sulfur elements experience redox and contribute to the high capacity. Moreover, the weakened interaction with magnesium cations, well-kept 3D cation transport tunnels, and high electronic conductivity result in the superior rate performance and high areal active material loading. The present study develops a high-performance cathode for rechargeable magnesium batteries and reveal the design principle based on both of chemical and electronic structures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.4c08576DOI Listing

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