Manganese pyrosilicates as novel positive electrode materials for Na-ion batteries

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Abstract

A carbon-coated pyrosilicate, Na 2 Mn 2 Si 2 O 7 /C, was synthesized and characterized for use as a new positive-electrode material for sodium ion batteries. The material consists of 20-80 nm primary particles embedded in a ≈10 nm-thick conductive carbon matrix. Reversible insertion of Na + ions is clearly demonstrated with ≈25% of its theoretical capacity (165 mA h g -1 ) being accessible at room temperature at a low cycling rate. The material yields an average potential of 3.3 V vs. Na + /Na on charge and 2.2 V on discharge. DFT calculations predict an equilibrium potential for Na 2 Mn 2 Si 2 O 7 in the range of 2.8-3.0 V vs. Na + /Na, with a possibility of a complete flip in the connectivity of neighboring Mn-polyhedra-from edge-sharing to disconnected and vice versa. This significant rearrangement in Mn coordination (≈2 Å) and large volume contraction (>10%) could explain our inability to fully desodiate the material, and illustrates well the need for a new electrode design strategy beyond the conventional "down-sizing/coating" procedure.

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Renman, V., Valvo, M., Tai, C. W., Gómez, C. P., Edström, K., & Liivat, A. (2018). Manganese pyrosilicates as novel positive electrode materials for Na-ion batteries. Sustainable Energy and Fuels, 2(5), 941–945. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7se00587c

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