Optimal water concentration for aqueous Li+intercalation in vanadyl phosphate

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Abstract

Development of high-performance aqueous batteries is an important goal for energy sustainability owing to their environmental benignity and low fabrication costs. Although a layered vanadyl phosphate is one of the most-studied host materials for intercalation electrodes with organic electrolytes, little attention has been paid to its use in aqueous Li+systems because of its excessive dissolution in water. Herein, by controlling the water concentration, we demonstrate the stable operation of a layered vanadyl phosphate electrode in an aqueous Li+electrolyte. The combination of experimental analyses and density functional theory calculations reveals that reversible (de)lithiation occurs between dehydrated phases, which can only exist in an optimal water concentration.

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Sun, D., Okubo, M., & Yamada, A. (2021). Optimal water concentration for aqueous Li+intercalation in vanadyl phosphate. Chemical Science, 12(12), 4450–4454. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0sc04647g

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