Vanadium pentoxide/carbide-derived carbon core-shell hybrid particles for high performance electrochemical energy storage

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Abstract

A novel, two step synthesis is presented combining the formation of carbide-derived carbon (CDC) and redox-active vanadium pentoxide (V2O5) in a core-shell manner using solely vanadium carbide (VC) as the precursor. In a first step, the outer part of VC particles is transformed to nanoporous CDC owing to the in situ formation of chlorine gas from NiCl2 at 700 °C. In a second step, the remaining VC core is calcined in synthetic air to obtain V2O5/CDC core-shell particles. Materials characterization by means of electron microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction clearly demonstrates the partial transformation from VC to CDC, as well as the successive oxidation to V2O5/CDC core-shell particles. Electrochemical performance was tested in organic 1 M LiClO4 in acetonitrile using half- and asymmetric full-cell configuration. High specific capacities of 420 mA h g-1 (normalized to V2O5) and 310 mA h g-1 (normalized to V2O5/CDC) were achieved. The unique nanotextured core-shell architecture enables high power retention with ultrafast charging and discharging, achieving more than 100 mA h g-1 at 5 A g-1 (rate of 12C). Asymmetric cell design with CDC on the positive polarization side leads to a high specific energy of up to 80 W h kg-1 with a superior retention of more than 80% over 10000 cycles and an overall energy efficiency of up to 80% at low rates.

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Zeiger, M., Ariyanto, T., Krüner, B., Peter, N. J., Fleischmann, S., Etzold, B. J. M., & Presser, V. (2016). Vanadium pentoxide/carbide-derived carbon core-shell hybrid particles for high performance electrochemical energy storage. Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 4(48), 18899–18909. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6ta08900c

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