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Dual-phase nanostructuring of layered metal oxides for high-performance aqueous rechargeable potassium ion microbatteries

Author

Listed:
  • Ying-Qi Li

    (Jilin University)

  • Hang Shi

    (Jilin University)

  • Sheng-Bo Wang

    (Jilin University)

  • Yi-Tong Zhou

    (Jilin University)

  • Zi Wen

    (Jilin University)

  • Xing-You Lang

    (Jilin University)

  • Qing Jiang

    (Jilin University)

Abstract

Aqueous rechargeable microbatteries are promising on-chip micropower sources for a wide variety of miniaturized electronics. However, their development is plagued by state-of-the-art electrode materials due to low capacity and poor rate capability. Here we show that layered potassium vanadium oxides, KxV2O5·nH2O, have an amorphous/crystalline dual-phase nanostructure to show genuine potential as high-performance anode materials of aqueous rechargeable potassium-ion microbatteries. The dual-phase nanostructured KxV2O5·nH2O keeps large interlayer spacing while removing secondary-bound interlayer water to create sufficient channels and accommodation sites for hydrated potassium cations. This unique nanostructure facilitates accessibility/transport of guest hydrated potassium cations to significantly improve practical capacity and rate performance of the constituent KxV2O5·nH2O. The potassium-ion microbatteries with KxV2O5·nH2O anode and KxMnO2·nH2O cathode constructed on interdigital-patterned nanoporous metal current microcollectors exhibit ultrahigh energy density of 103 mWh cm−3 at electrical power comparable to carbon-based microsupercapacitors.

Suggested Citation

  • Ying-Qi Li & Hang Shi & Sheng-Bo Wang & Yi-Tong Zhou & Zi Wen & Xing-You Lang & Qing Jiang, 2019. "Dual-phase nanostructuring of layered metal oxides for high-performance aqueous rechargeable potassium ion microbatteries," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 10(1), pages 1-9, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:10:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-12274-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-12274-7
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