Array of nanosheets render ultrafast and high-capacity Na-ion storage by tunable pseudocapacitance

Dongliang Chao(Nanyang Technological University), Changrong Zhu(Nanyang Technological University), Peihua Yang(Nanyang Technological University), Xinhui Xia(State Key Laboratory of Silicon Materials), Jilei Liu(Nanyang Technological University), Jin Wang(Nanyang Technological University), Xiaofeng Fan(Jilin University), Serguei V. Savilov(Lomonosov Moscow State University), Jianyi Lin(Nanyang Technological University), Hong Jin Fan(Nanyang Technological University), Zexiang Shen(Nanyang Technological University)
Nature Communications
June 30, 2016
Cited by 1,437Open Access
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Abstract

Sodium-ion batteries are a potentially low-cost and safe alternative to the prevailing lithium-ion battery technology. However, it is a great challenge to achieve fast charging and high power density for most sodium-ion electrodes because of the sluggish sodiation kinetics. Here we demonstrate a high-capacity and high-rate sodium-ion anode based on ultrathin layered tin(II) sulfide nanostructures, in which a maximized extrinsic pseudocapacitance contribution is identified and verified by kinetics analysis. The graphene foam supported tin(II) sulfide nanoarray anode delivers a high reversible capacity of ∼1,100 mAh g(-1) at 30 mA g(-1) and ∼420 mAh g(-1) at 30 A g(-1), which even outperforms its lithium-ion storage performance. The surface-dominated redox reaction rendered by our tailored ultrathin tin(II) sulfide nanostructures may also work in other layered materials for high-performance sodium-ion storage.


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