Rational Design of Multinary Metal Chalcogenide Bi 0.4 Sb 1.6 Te 3 Nanocrystals for Efficient Potassium Storage.
Longhai ZhangJiatu LiuYunming ZhaiShilin ZhangWei WangGuanjie LiLiang SunHongbao LiShuo QiShuangqiang ChenRui WangQuanwei MaJustus JustChao-Feng ZhangPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
Multinary metal chalcogenides hold considerable promise for high-energy potassium storage due to their numerous redox reactions. However, challenges arise from issues such as volume expansion and sluggish kinetics. Here, a design featuring a layered ternary Bi 0.4 Sb 1.6 Te 3 anchored on graphene layers as a composite anode, where Bi atoms act as a lattice softening agent on Sb, is presented. Benefiting from the lattice arrangement in Bi 0.4 Sb 1.6 Te 3 and structure, Bi 0.4 Sb 1.6 Te 3 /graphene exhibits a mitigated expansion of 28% during the potassiation/depotassiation process and demonstrates facile K + ion transfer kinetics, enabling long-term durability of 500 cycles at various high rates. Operando synchrotron diffraction patterns and spectroscopies including in situ Raman, ex situ adsorption, and X-ray photoelectron reveal multiple conversion and alloying/dealloying reactions for potassium storage at the atomic level. In addition, both theoretical calculations and electrochemical examinations elucidate the K + migration pathways and indicate a reduction in energy barriers within Bi 0.4 Sb 1.6 Te 3 /graphene, thereby suggesting enhanced diffusion kinetics for K + . These findings provide insight in the design of durable high-energy multinary tellurides for potassium storage.
Keyphrases
- reduced graphene oxide
- room temperature
- gold nanoparticles
- aqueous solution
- highly efficient
- machine learning
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance
- genome wide
- computed tomography
- electron microscopy
- mass spectrometry
- deep learning
- gene expression
- quantum dots
- artificial intelligence
- simultaneous determination
- contrast enhanced
- liquid chromatography
- crystal structure
- tandem mass spectrometry
- energy transfer