Low-Cost High-Energy Potassium Cathode.
Leigang XueYutao LiHongcai GaoWeidong ZhouXujie LüWatchareeya KaveevivitchaiArumugam ManthiramJohn B GoodenoughPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
Potassium has as rich an abundance as sodium in the earth, but the development of a K-ion battery is lagging behind because of the higher mass and larger ionic size of K+ than that of Li+ and Na+, which makes it difficult to identify a high-voltage and high-capacity intercalation cathode host. Here we propose a cyanoperovskite KxMnFe(CN)6 (0 ≤ x ≤ 2) as a potassium cathode: high-spin MnIII/MnII and low-spin FeIII/FeII couples have similar energies and exhibit two close plateaus centered at 3.6 V; two active K+ per formula unit enable a theoretical specific capacity of 156 mAh g-1; Mn and Fe are the two most-desired transition metals for electrodes because they are cheap and environmental friendly. As a powder prepared by an inexpensive precipitation method, the cathode delivers a specific capacity of 142 mAh g-1. The observed voltage, capacity, and its low cost make it competitive in large-scale electricity storage applications.