The soft-chemistry synthetic routes of anatase phases for energy conversion and storage usually employ expensive and air-sensitive amorphous alkoxides, which hardly access the electrochemically active cationic vacancy defects in the cationic donor-substituted anatase compositions. Here we demonstrate an innovative way of using layered KTiNbO as a cost-effectively crystalline precursor to synthesize cation-deficient Nb-doped TiO (NTO, formulated as TiNb□O) anatase by a one-pot hydrothermal route. When used as an anode in lithium ion batteries, the NTO electrode displayed initial discharge and charge capacities of 618 and 384.6 mA h g at a current density of 0.2C respectively, with a remarkable discharge capacity of ~246.8 mA h g retained after 100 cycles, representing the highest value among those reported for Nb-doped TiO anatases at low current density. A discharge capacity of 137.1 mA h g was obtained even at a high current density of 2C. A full cell, fabricated using the NTO electrode as the anode and a commercial LiCoO cathode, is shown to deliver a discharge capacity of 220.2 mA h g after 57 cycles, which exceeds those of most previously reported full cells based on the TiO anode and makes this NTO material a promising anode candidate for LIBs. These results present a practical synthetic strategy for tuning cationic vacancies through aliovalent cationic substitution to improve the electrochemical performance of actual LIBs and possibly to develop further relevant devices.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11467823 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C8TA07605G | DOI Listing |
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