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TiO2-Coated Interlayer-Expanded MoSe2/Phosphorus-Doped Carbon Nanospheres for Ultrafast and Ultralong Cycling Sodium Storage.

Yuyu WangYunxiao WangWenpei KangDongwei CaoChenxu LiDongxu CaoZixi KangDaofeng SunRongming WangYu-Liang Cao
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2018)
Based on multielectron conversion reactions, layered transition metal dichalcogenides are considered promising electrode materials for sodium-ion batteries, but suffer from poor cycling performance and rate capability due to their low intrinsic conductivity and severe volume variations. Here, interlayer-expanded MoSe2/phosphorus-doped carbon hybrid nanospheres coated by anatase TiO2 (denoted as MoSe2/P-C@TiO2) are prepared by a facile hydrolysis reaction, in which TiO2 coating polypyrrole-phosphomolybdic acid is utilized as a novel precursor followed by a selenization process. Benefiting from synergistic effects of MoSe2, phosphorus-doped carbon, and TiO2, the hybrid nanospheres manifest unprecedented cycling stability and ultrafast pseudocapacitive sodium storage capability. The MoSe2/P-C@TiO2 delivers decent reversible capacities of 214 mAh g-1 at 5.0 A g-1 for 8000 cycles, 154 mAh g-1 at 10.0 A g-1 for 10000 cycles, and an exceptional rate capability up to 20.0 A g-1 with a capacity of ≈175 mAh g-1 in a voltage range of 0.5-3.0 V. Coupled with a Na3V2(PO4)3@C cathode, a full cell successfully confirms a reversible capacity of 242.2 mAh g-1 at 0.5 A g-1 for 100 cycles with a coulombic efficiency over 99%.
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