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Amorphous Metal Polysulfides: Electrode Materials with Unique Insertion/Extraction Reactions.

Akitoshi HayashiKoji OharaKatsutoshi FukudaKoji NakanishiTomoya KawaguchiHajime AraiYoshiharu UchimotoToshiaki OhtaEiichiro MatsubaraZempachi OgumiToyoki OkumuraHironori KobayashiHiroyuki KageyamaMasahiro ShikanoHikari SakaebeTomonari Takeuchi
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
A unique charge/discharge mechanism of amorphous TiS4 is reported. Amorphous transition metal polysulfide electrodes exhibit anomalous charge/discharge performance and should have a unique charge/discharge mechanism: neither the typical intercalation/deintercalation mechanism nor the conversion-type one, but a mixture of the two. Analyzing the mechanism of such electrodes has been a challenge because fewer tools are available to examine the "amorphous" structure. It is revealed that the electrode undergoes two distinct structural changes: (i) the deformation and formation of S-S disulfide bonds and (ii) changes in the coordination number of titanium. These structural changes proceed continuously and concertedly for Li insertion/extraction. The results of this study provide a novel and unique model of amorphous electrode materials with significantly larger capacities.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • room temperature
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  • transition metal
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