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Phase Transformations and Phase Segregation during Potassiation of Sn x P y Anodes.

Andrew W EllsMatthew L EvansMatthias F GrohAndrew J MorrisLauren E Marbella
Published in: Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society (2022)
K-ion batteries (KIBs) have the potential to offer a cheaper alternative to Li-ion batteries (LIBs) using widely abundant materials. Conversion/alloying anodes have high theoretical capacities in KIBs, but it is believed that electrode damage from volume expansion and phase segregation by the accommodation of large K-ions leads to capacity loss during electrochemical cycling. To date, the exact phase transformations that occur during potassiation and depotassiation of conversion/alloying anodes are relatively unexplored. In this work, we synthesize two distinct compositions of tin phosphides, Sn 4 P 3 and SnP 3 , and compare their conversion/alloying mechanisms with solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (SSNMR) spectroscopy, powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Ex situ 31 P and 119 Sn SSNMR analyses reveal that while both Sn 4 P 3 and SnP 3 exhibit phase separation of elemental P and the formation of KSnP-type environments (which are predicted to be stable based on DFT calculations) during potassiation, only Sn 4 P 3 produces metallic Sn as a byproduct. In both anode materials, K reacts with elemental P to form K-rich compounds containing isolated P sites that resemble K 3 P but K does not alloy with Sn during potassiation of Sn 4 P 3 . During charge, K is only fully removed from the K 3 P-type structures, suggesting that the formation of ternary regions in the anode and phase separation contribute to capacity loss upon reaction of K with tin phosphides.
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