Green Energy & Environment (Jul 2024)

Tailoring NH4+ storage by regulating oxygen defect in ammonium vanadate

  • Yanyan Liu,
  • Ziyi Feng,
  • Hanmei Jiang,
  • Xueying Dong,
  • Changgong Meng,
  • Yifu Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 7
pp. 1171 – 1182

Abstract

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Defect engineering is an effective strategy for modifying the energy storage materials to improve their electrochemical performance. However, the impact of oxygen defect and its content on the electrochemical performances in the burgeoning aqueous NH4+ storage field remains explored. Therefore, for the first time in this work, an oxygen-defective ammonium vanadate [(NH4)2V10O25·8H2O, denoted as Od-NHVO] with a novel 3D porous flower-like architecture was achieved via the reduction of thiourea in a mild reaction condition, which is a facile method that can realize the intention to regulate the oxygen defect content, with the capability of mass-production. The as-prepared OdM-NHVO with moderate oxygen defect content can deliver a stable specific capacitance output (505 F g−1, 252 mAh g−1 at 0.5 A g−1 with ∼80% capacitance retention after 10,000 cycles), which benefits from extra active sites, unimpeded NH4+-migration path and relatively high structure integrity. In contrast, low oxygen defect content will lead to the torpid electrochemical reaction kinetics while too high content of it will reduce the charge-storage capability and induce structural disintegration. The superior NH4+-storage behavior is achieved with the reversible intercalation/de-intercalation process of NH4+ accompanied by forming/breaking of hydrogen bond. As expected, the assembled flexible OdM-NHVO//PTCDI quasi-solid-state hybrid supercapacitor (FQSS HSC) also exhibits high areal capacitance, energy density and reliable flexibility. This work provides a new avenue for developing materials with oxygen-deficient structure for application in various aqueous non-metal cation storage systems.

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