Nitrogen and sulfur co-doped Ti 3 C 2 T x MXenes for high-rate lithium-ion batteries.
Renfei ChengTao HuJinxing YangZuohua WangWeizhen WangYan LiangZhiqing YangHongwang ZhangXiaohui WangPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
The electrification of heavy-duty transport and aviation urgently requires new strategies to develop high-rate lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) whose performance fundamentally relies on electrode materials. However, commercially available graphite anodes still suffer from slow kinetics of lithium-ion diffusion and severe safety concerns of lithium plating when achieving the high-rate use goal. Herein, taking Ti 3 C 2 T x as an example, it is demonstrated that N and S co-doping in Ti 3 C 2 T x results in a high-rate MXene anode for LIBs. Nitrogen doping not only flattens the MXene layers and expands the interlayer spacing but also increases the Ti valence state change ability. As evidenced by density functional theory calculations, the diffusion barriers of S-containing Ti 3 C 2 T x MXenes are lower than those of the S-free counterpart, suggesting that S plays an essential role in achieving high-rate performance. Therefore, the N and S co-doped Ti 3 C 2 T x anode in LIBs exhibited excellent performance with a reversible capacity of 113.8 mA h g -1 at a rate of 3C and ∼89% capacity retention after 1000 charge/discharge cycles. The high capacity is attributed to the change in the oxidation states of both Ti and O elements, and the tiny volume change within ∼0.6% upon the stable charging/discharging process accounts for the good capacity retention. When paired up with a LiFe 0.5 Mn 0.5 PO 4 cathode, the full cell delivers a reversible capacity of 134 mA h g -1 after 1000 cycles at a high rate of 1C. The demonstration of N and S co-doped Ti 3 C 2 T x MXenes in this work may offer a feasible approach for high-rate intercalation anode materials.