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In Situ Lattice-Resolution Revelation of the Origins of Unexplored Anisotropic Sodiation Kinetics and Phase Transition in the Niobium Sulfide Anode.

Ruining FuYuchen PanYuhao HuaLin SuShisheng HouYuwei XiongShuang-Ying LeiHuihua MinPengcheng LiuLi-Tao SunFeng Xu
Published in: ACS nano (2024)
Layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have exhibited huge potential as anode materials for sodium-ion batteries. Most of them usually store sodium via an intercalation-conversion mechanism, but niobium sulfide (NbS 2 ) may be an exception. Herein, through in situ transmission electron microscopy, we carefully investigated the insertion behaviors of Na ions in NbS 2 and directly visualized anisotropic sodiation kinetics. Lattice-resolution imaging coupled with density functional theory calculations reveals the preferential diffusion of Na ions within layers of NbS 2 , accompanied by observable interlayer lattice expansion. Impressively, the Na-inserted layers can still withstand in situ mechanical testing. Further in situ observation vertical to the a / b plane of NbS 2 tracked the illusive conversion reaction, which could result from interlayer gliding or wrinkling associated with stress accumulation. In situ electron diffraction measurements ruled out the possibility of such a conversion mechanism and identified a phase transition from pristine 3R-NbS 2 to 2H-NaNbS 2 . Therefore, the NbS 2 anode stores Na ions via only the intercalation mechanism, which conceptually differs from the well-known intercalation-conversion mechanism of typical TMDs. These findings not only decipher the whole sodiation process of the NbS 2 anode but also provide valuable reference for unraveling the precise sodium storage mechanism in other TMDs.
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