Heterostructure manipulation via in situ localized phase transformation for high-rate and highly durable lithium ion storage

Date

2018

Authors

Hao, J.
Zhang, J.
Xia, G.
Liu, Y.
Zheng, Y.
Zhang, W.
Tang, Y.
Pang, W.K.
Guo, Z.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

ACS Nano, 2018; 12(10):10430-10438

Statement of Responsibility

Junnan Hao, Jian Zhang, Guanglin Xia, Yajie Liu, Yang Zheng, Wenchao Zhang, Yongbing Tang, Wei Kong Pang, and Zaiping Guo

Conference Name

Abstract

Recently, heterostructures have attracted much attention in widespread research fields. By tailoring the physicochemical properties of the two components, creating heterostructures endows composites with diverse functions due to the synergistic effects and interfacial interaction. Here, a simple in situ localized phase transformation method is proposed to transform the transition-metal oxide electrode materials into heterostructures. Taking molybdenum oxide as an example, quasi-core–shell MoO₃@MoO₂ heterostructures were successfully fabricated, which were uniformly anchored on reduced graphene oxide (rGO) for high-rate and highly durable lithium ion storage. The in situ introduction of the MoO₂ shell not only effectively enhances the electronic conductivity but also creates MoO₃@MoO₂ heterojunctions with abundant oxygen vacancies, which induces an inbuilt driving force at the interface, enhancing ion/electron transfer. In operando synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction has confirmed the excellent phase reversibility of the MoO₂ shell during charge/discharge cycling, which contributes to the excellent cycling stability of the MoO₃@MoO₂/rGO electrode (1208.9 mAh g⁻¹ remaining at 5 A g⁻¹ after 2000 cycles). This simple in situ heterostructure fabrication method provides a facile way to optimize electrode materials for high-performance lithium ion batteries and possibly other energy storage devices.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2018 American Chemical Society

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record