Nature Communications | 2019

Vanadium disulfide flakes with nanolayered titanium disulfide coating as cathode materials in lithium-ion batteries

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Unlike the vast majority of transition metal dichalcogenides which are semiconductors, vanadium disulfide is metallic and conductive. This makes it particularly promising as an electrode material in lithium-ion batteries. However, vanadium disulfide exhibits poor stability due to large Peierls distortion during cycling. Here we report that vanadium disulfide flakes can be rendered stable in the electrochemical environment of a lithium-ion battery by conformally coating them with a ~2.5\u2009nm thick titanium disulfide layer. Density functional theory calculations indicate that the titanium disulfide coating is far less susceptible to Peierls distortion during the lithiation-delithiation process, enabling it to stabilize the underlying vanadium disulfide material. The titanium disulfide coated vanadium disulfide cathode exhibits an operating voltage of ~2\u2009V, high specific capacity (~180\u2009mAh\u2009g−1 @200\u2009mA\u2009g−1 current density) and rate capability (~70\u2009mAh\u2009g−1 @1000\u2009mA\u2009g−1), while achieving capacity retention close to 100% after 400 charge−discharge steps.VS2 is a promising cathode material for lithium-ion batteries, but is\xa0susceptible to Peierls distortion during (de)lithiation. Here the authors show that VS2 cathodes can be stabilized by conformally coating them with a nanoscale TiS2 protective layer, leading to impressive electrochemical performance.

Volume 10
Pages None
DOI 10.1038/s41467-019-09400-w
Language English
Journal Nature Communications

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