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Hydrated Calcium Vanadate Nanoribbons with a Stable Structure and Fast Ion Diffusion as a Cathode for Quasi-Solid-State Zinc-Ion Batteries.

Penghua LiangKongjun ZhuYu RaoZhihan KongJiatao ChenHongjuan ZhengJinsong LiuKang YanJing WangKaiyang Zeng
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
We demonstrated the use of hydrated calcium vanadate (CaV 6 O 16 ·3H 2 O, denoted as CaVO-2) as a cathode for aqueous zinc-ion batteries (AZIBs). Nanoribbons of hydrated calcium vanadate facilitated shortening of the Zn 2+ transport distance and accelerated zinc-ion insertion. The introduction of interlayer structure water increased the interlayer spacing of calcium vanadate and as a "lubricant". Ca 2+ insertion also expanded the interlayer spacing and further stabilized the interlayer structure of vanadium-based oxide. The density functional theory results showed that the introduction of Ca 2+ and structured water could effectively improve the diffusion kinetics, resulting in the rapid transport of zinc ions. As a result, AZIBs based on the CaVO-2 cathode offered high specific capacity (329.6 mAh g -1 at 200 mA g -1 ) and fast charge/discharge capability (147 mAh g -1 at 10 A g -1 ). Impressively, quasi-solid-state zinc-ion batteries based on the CaVO-2 cathode and polyacrylamide-cellulose nanofiber hydrogel electrolytes maintained an outstanding specific capacity and long cycle life (162 mAh g -1 over 10 000 cycles at 5 A g -1 ). This study provided a reliable strategy for metal-ion insertion and the structural water introduction of oxides to produce a high-quality cathode for ZIBs. Meanwhile, it provides ideas for the combination of vanadium-based materials and gel electrolytes to construct solid-state zinc-ion batteries.
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