Electrochemically Induced Structural and Morphological Evolutions in Nickel Vanadium Oxide Hydrate Nanobelts Enabling Fast Transport Kinetics for High-Performance Zinc Storage
Jingjie Feng, Yang Wang, Shenghong Liu, Siyuan Chen, Ni Wen, Xinxuan Zeng, Youzhong Dong, Chunmao Huang, Quan Kuang, Yanming Zhao
Abstract
Suitable intercalation cathodes and fundamental insights into the Zn-ion storage mechanism are the crucial factors for the booming development of aqueous zinc-ion batteries. Herein, a novel nickel vanadium oxide hydrate (Ni0.25V2O5·0.88H2O) is synthesized and investigated as a high-performance electrode material, which delivers a reversible capacity of 418 mA h g–1 with 155 mA h g–1 retained at 20 A g–1 and a high capacity of 293 mA h g–1 in long-term cycling at 10 A g–1 with 77% retention after 10,000 cycles. More importantly, multistep phase transition and chemical-state change during intercalation/deintercalation of hydrated Zn2+ are illustrated in detail via in situ/ex situ analytical techniques to unveil the Zn2+ storage mechanism of the hydrated and layered vanadium oxide bronze. Furthermore, morphological development from nanobelts to hierarchical structures during rapid ion insertion and extraction is demonstrated and a self-hierarchical process is correspondingly proposed. The unique evolutions of structure and morphology, together with consequent fast Zn2+ transport kinetics, are of significance to the outstanding zinc storage capacity, which would enlighten the mechanism exploration of the aqueous rechargeable batteries and push development of vanadium-based cathode materials.