Title: | The gamma vanadium oxide as a potential cathode material for rechargeable aqueous multivalent ion batteries |
Authors: | Vasić, Milica Milović, Miloš Novaković, Mirjana Bajuk-Bogdanović, Danica Stephan, Arul Manuel Jugović, Dragana Vujković, Milica |
Keywords: | Aqueous batteries;High Ca2+ storage capacity;Multivalent-ion insertion;γ-LiV2O5 cathode |
Issue Date: | 1-Jul-2025 |
Journal: | Ceramics International |
Abstract: | The focus of this study is to investigate capabilities of gamma lithium vanadium oxide (γ-LiV2O5) to accommodate ions beyond Li+. The γ-LiV2O5 has been tested electrochemically as a potential candidate for novel aqueous rechargeable batteries based on multivalent ions, namely Mg2+, Ca2+ and Al3+. The γ-LiV2O5 is prepared by a simple solid-state reaction and characterized by XRD, SEM, HRTEM, FTIR, Raman, and Impedance methods, before and after CV cycling. Li+ ions can take octahedral cationic sites in the oxide lattice, which leads to γ ↔ γ′ reversible phase transition, but their subsequent occupation of tetrahedral sites incites irreversible γ ↔ ζ transition and capacity fade during extended cycling in LiNO3. In contrast, such irreversible behavior is not observed in Ca(NO3)2 and Mg(NO3)2, where initial repeated cycling, including negative potentials, causes the CV growth. Although Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions weekly intercalate into the structure, as indicated by BVS analysis, the proton coinsertion, during early cycling stage activates the surface, causing large platelets to crumble and boosting pseudocapacitive-type redox behavior. This results in a high specific capacity in bivalent electrolytes, especially in Ca(NO3)2, which amounts to 128 mAh g−1 at 1 A g-1. Although the agglomeration of reduced particles leads to a decline in capacity over extended cycling, the capacity remains high after 150 cycles, reaching 74 mAh g−1. In LiNO3, the identification of γ’ phase after long cycling within the stable potential window, together with agglomerated microplatelets (which are not crushed during initial Li+, thus limiting capacity to ≈ 27 mA hg−1) is linked to the capacity fade. Furthermore, when cycled in Al3+ electrolyte, the material degrades quickly due to the dissolution process at the beginning of cycling. Therefore, the Ca2+ electrolyte is identified as the most promising for the development of rechargeable aqueous batteries with gamma phase V2O5 cathode. |
URI: | https://dspace.ffh.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2504 |
ISSN: | 02728842 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ceramint.2025.03.310 |
Appears in Collections: | Journal Article
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