RESUMO
Aqueous Ca-ion batteries (ACIBs) attract immense attention due to its high safety and the high abundance of calcium. However, the development of ACIBs is hindered by the lack of high voltage cathode materials to host the large radius and divalent Ca2+ . Herein, polyanionic phosphate K3 V2 (PO4 )3 /C (KVP/C) is provided as a new cathode material for ACIBs. Due to the robust structure of polyanion material and the wide electrochemical window of water-in-salt electrolyte, KVP/C delivers a high working voltage of 3.74 V versus Ca2+ /Ca with a specific capacity of 102.4 mAh g-1 and a long-life of 6000 cycles at 500 mA g-1 . Furthermore, the calcium storage mechanism of KVP/C is shown to be the coexistence of solid solution and two-phase reaction by in situ X-ray diffraction, ex situ transmission electron microscope, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Finally, an aqueous calcium-ion full cell, based on an organic compound as anode and KVP/C as cathode, is constructed and it shows good stability for 200 cycles and a specific capacity of 80.2 mAh g-1 . This work demonstrates that vanadium-based phosphate materials are promising high-voltage cathode materials for ACIBs and renew the prospects for ACIBs.
RESUMO
Calcium-ion batteries are an emerging energy storage device owing to the low redox potential of Ca2+/Ca and the naturally abundant reserves of the Ca element. However, the high charge density and large radius of Ca2+ lead to a low calcium storage capacity or unsatisfactory cycling performance for most electrode materials. Herein, we report the organic crystal 3,4,9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic diimide (PTCDI) as an anode material for aqueous calcium-ion batteries (ACIBs) in a water-in-salt electrolyte. PTCDI delivers a high discharge capacity of 131.8 mAh g-1, excellent rate performance (86.2 mAh g-1@10000 mA g-1), and an ultralong life of 68000 cycles (over 470 days) with a high capacity retention of 72.7%. The calcium storage mechanism of PTCDI is shown to be an enolization reaction by in situ attenuated total reflectance Fourier-transform infrared and ex situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The activation mechanism of PTCDI microribbon splitting along the (020) crystal plane is studied by in situ X-ray diffraction, 3D tomography reconstruction technologies, and ex situ transmission electron microscopy. In addition, the Ca2+ storage sites and diffusion pathways of PTCDI are studied by density functional theory calculations. Finally, by matching a high-voltage Prussian blue analogue cathode, the assembled aqueous calcium-ion full cells exhibit excellent wide-temperature operating capability (-20 to +50 °C) and an ultralong life of 30000 cycles. Further, an aqueous calcium-ion pouch cell is constructed and exhibits a long lifetime of over 500 cycles.
RESUMO
The narrow electrochemical stability window (1.23 V) of an aqueous electrolyte hinders the practical realization of calcium-ion chemistries of high-energy-density and long-cycle-life batteries. Furthermore, developing an aqueous electrolyte that is low cost, is environmentally friendly, and has a wide voltage window is essential to designing safe, high-energy-density, and sustainable calcium-ion batteries. A calcium-based water-in-salt (WISE) aqueous electrolyte surpasses the narrow stability window by offering a 2.12 V wide window by suppressing the hydrogen evolution at the anode and minimizing the overall water activity at the cathode. A comprehensive theoretical study predicts the preferential reduction of salt aggregates over water to form a passivation layer at the electrode-electrolyte interface and enhance the electrolyte stability window. Additionally, Raman spectroscopy reveals that the calcium ion coordination number, which is the number of nitrate ions surrounding the calcium ions in the aqueous electrolyte, gradually increases with an increase in the electrolyte concentration, leading to a gradual decrease in the hydration number of the calcium ions. A full cell in WISE was demonstrated to exhibit an excellent rate capability and cycling stability with negligible capacity loss (0.01 per cycle), maintaining 80% capacity retention over 1800 cycles with â¼99.99% Coulombic efficiency. The full cell provides an energy density of 232 Wh kg-1 at a power density of 69 W kg-1 and a current rate of 0.15 A g-1. Even at a higher current rate of 5 A g-1, the battery delivers an energy density of 182 Wh kg-1 (based on the active mass of the anode). This is one of the best performances to date of all previously reported full-cell aqueous calcium-ion batteries. A fundamental understanding of the storage mechanism and a electrode degradation study was achieved. This work suggests and expands new avenues for the practical realization of low-cost, safe, eco-friendly, and high-performance aqueous calcium-ion batteries for future large storage applications.
RESUMO
In response to the application requirements of secondary batteries at low temperature, an all-organic dual-ion battery with calcium perchlorate contained acetonitrile as the electrolyte (CAN-ODIB) is fabricated in this work. The electrochemical energy is stored in CAN-ODIB via the association and disassociation of calcium and perchlorate ions in perylene diimide-ethylene diamine/carbon black composite based anode and polytriphenylamine based cathode with highly reversible redox states. Benefiting from the energy storage mechanism, CAN-ODIB exhibits excellent electrochemical performances in tests with the temperature ranging from 25 to -50 °C. Especially, CAN-ODIB at -50 °C reserves ≈61% of the capacity at 25 °C (83.4 mA h g-1 ) with the current density of 0.2 A g-1 . CAN-ODIB also shows excellent cycling stability at low temperature by retaining 90.3% of the initial capacity at 1.0 A g-1 after 450 charge-discharge cycles at -30 °C. The impedance analysis of CAN-ODIB at different temperatures indicates that the low temperature performance of CAN-ODIB depends more on the electrode materials than the electrolyte, which provides the important guidance for the further design of secondary batteries operable at low temperatures.
RESUMO
Calcium-ion batteries (CIBs) are considered as promising alternatives in large-scale energy storage due to their divalent electron redox properties, low cost, and high volumetric/gravimetric capacity. However, the high charge density of Ca2+ contributes to strong electrostatic interaction between divalent Ca2+ and hosting lattice, leading to sluggish kinetics and poor rate performance. Here, in situ formed poly(anthraquinonyl sulfide) (PAQS)@CNT composite is reported as nonaqueous calcium-ion battery cathode. The enolization redox chemistry of organics has fast redox kinetics, and the introduction of carbon nanotube (CNT) accelerates electron transportation, which contributes to fast ionic diffusion. As the conductivity of the PAQS is enhanced by the increasing content of CNT, the voltage gap is significantly reduced. The PAQS@CNT electrode exhibits specific capacity (116 mAh g-1 at 0.05 A g-1 ), high rate capacity (60 mAh g-1 at 4 A g-1 ), and an initial capacity of 82 mAh g-1 at 1 A g-1 (83% capacity retention after 500 cycles). The electrochemical mechanism is proved to be that the PAQS undergoes reduction reaction of their carbonyl bond during discharge and becomes coordinated by Ca2+ and Ca(TFSI)+ species. Computational simulation also suggests that the construction of Ca2+ and Ca(TFSI)+ co-intercalation in the PAQS is the most reasonable pathway.
RESUMO
Calcium-ion batteries (CIBs) are a promising alternative to lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) due to the low redox potential of calcium metal and high abundance of calcium compounds. Due to its layered structure, α-MoO3 is regarded as a promising cathode host lattice. While studies have reported that α-MoO3 can reversibly intercalate Ca ions, limited electrochemical activity has been noted, and its reaction mechanism remains unclear. Here, we re-examine Ca insertion into α-MoO3 nanoparticles with a goal to improve reaction kinetics and clarify the storage mechanism. The α-MoO3 electrodes demonstrated a specific capacity of 165 mA h g-1 centered near 2.7 V vs Ca2+/Ca, stable long-term cycling, and good rate performance at room temperature. This work demonstrates that, under the correct conditions, layered oxides can be a promising host material for CIBs and renews prospects for CIBs.
Assuntos
Cálcio , Nanopartículas , Eletrodos , Íons , Lítio/químicaRESUMO
Multivalent batteries, such as magnesium-ion, calcium-ion, and zinc-ion batteries, have attracted significant attention as next-generation electrochemical energy storage devices to complement conventional lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). Among them, calcium-ion batteries (CIBs) are the least explored due to difficult reversible Ca deposition-dissolution. In this work, we examined the stability of four different Ca salts with weakly coordinating anions and three different solvents commonly employed in existing battery technologies to identify suitable candidates for CIBs. By employing Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) simulations on salt-Ca and solvent-Ca interfaces, we find that the tetraglyme solvent and carborane salt are promising candidates for CIBs. Due to the strong reducing nature of the calcium surface, the other salts and solvents readily decompose. We explain the microscopic mechanisms of salt/solvent decomposition on the Ca surface using time-dependent projected density of states, time-dependent charge-transfer plots, and climbing-image nudged elastic band calculations. Collectively, this work presents the first mechanistic assessment of the dynamical stability of candidate salts and solvents on a Ca surface using BOMD simulations, and provides a predictive path toward designing stable electrolytes for CIBs.
RESUMO
Calcium-ion batteries (CIBs) are considered to be promising next-generation energy storage systems because of the natural abundance of calcium and the multivalent calcium ions with low redox potential close to that of lithium. However, the practical realization of high-energy and high-power CIBs is elusive owing to the lack of suitable electrodes and the sluggish diffusion of calcium ions in most intercalation hosts. Herein, it is demonstrated that calcium-ion intercalation can be remarkably fast and reversible in natural graphite, constituting the first step toward the realization of high-power calcium electrodes. It is shown that a graphite electrode exhibits an exceptionally high rate capability up to 2 A g-1 , delivering ≈75% of the specific capacity at 50 mA g-1 with full calcium intercalation in graphite corresponding to ≈97 mAh g-1 . Moreover, the capacity stably maintains over 200 cycles without notable cycle degradation. It is found that the calcium ions are intercalated into graphite galleries with a staging process. The intercalation mechanisms of the "calciated" graphite are elucidated using a suite of techniques including synchrotron in situ X-ray diffraction, nuclear magnetic resonance, and first-principles calculations. The versatile intercalation chemistry of graphite observed here is expected to spur the development of high-power CIBs.
RESUMO
Recent developments in rechargeable battery technology have seen a shift from the well-established Li-ion technology to new chemistries to achieve the high energy density required for extended range electric vehicles and other portable applications, as well as low-cost alternatives for stationary storage. These chemistries include Li-air, Li-S, and multivalent ion technologies including Mg2+ , Zn2+ , Ca2+ , and Al3+ . While Mg2+ battery systems have been increasingly investigated in the last few years, Ca2+ technology has only recently been recognized as a viable option. In this first comprehensive review of Ca2+ ion technology, the use of Ca metal anodes, alternative alloy anodes, electrolytes suitable for this system, and cathode material development are discussed. The advantages and disadvantages of Ca2+ ion batteries including prospective achievable energy density, cost reduction due to high natural abundance, low ion mobility, the effect of ion size, and the need for elevated temperature operation are reviewed. The use of density functional theory modeling to predict the properties of Ca-ion battery materials is discussed and the extent to which this approach is successful in directing research into areas of promise is evaluated. To conclude, a summary of recent achievements is presented and areas for future research efforts evaluated.