TY - JOUR
T1 - Defective 1T-VS2 with fibonacci pattern unlocking high mass-loading and self-charging cathodes for aqueous zinc-ion batteries
AU - Li, Tao
AU - Dong, Xinji
AU - Yang, Hange
AU - Zhang, Jianwei
AU - Huang, Rong
AU - Lv, Zhuoran
AU - Li, Yueyue
AU - Zhang, Shicong
AU - Huang, Fuqiang
AU - Lin, Tianquan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2025/3/5
Y1 - 2025/3/5
N2 - Cathode materials that exhibit high capacity, rapid charging, and long lifespan at high mass loading are crucial for the commercialization of aqueous zinc-ion batteries (aZIBs). However, challenges such as sluggish electrochemical kinetics and structural degradation during cycling often lead to low specific capacity and poor cycling stability, especially under high mass loading conditions, hindering their practical application. In this study, we introduce a novel defective 1T-VS2 micro-rose material with a Fibonacci golden pattern structure, engineered to optimize the electrochemical performance of aZIBs. The unique rose-like morphology of the material promotes both a uniform and enriched electric field and concentration distribution, facilitating efficient ion and electron transport. This architecture, combined with abundant sulfur vacancies and vanadium intercalation, enhances structural stability, reduces cation migration barriers, and accelerates electrochemical kinetics. at high mass loading (up to 30 mg cm−2), the defective 1T-VS2 cathode demonstrates excellent capacity retention (220 ma h g−1, 83% retention), remarkable cycling stability (80% retention over 400 cycles at 20 ma cm−2), and superior rate capability. Notably, the material also exhibits outstanding self-charging performance, with a high self-charging efficiency and an impressive self-charging rate, even at a high mass loading of 10 mg cm−2. This work not only underscores the exceptional electrochemical properties of the defective 1T-VS2 cathode but also presents a design strategy that integrates macro-to-micro-scale structural optimization, offering a promising direction for the development of high-performance cathodes in energy storage applications.
AB - Cathode materials that exhibit high capacity, rapid charging, and long lifespan at high mass loading are crucial for the commercialization of aqueous zinc-ion batteries (aZIBs). However, challenges such as sluggish electrochemical kinetics and structural degradation during cycling often lead to low specific capacity and poor cycling stability, especially under high mass loading conditions, hindering their practical application. In this study, we introduce a novel defective 1T-VS2 micro-rose material with a Fibonacci golden pattern structure, engineered to optimize the electrochemical performance of aZIBs. The unique rose-like morphology of the material promotes both a uniform and enriched electric field and concentration distribution, facilitating efficient ion and electron transport. This architecture, combined with abundant sulfur vacancies and vanadium intercalation, enhances structural stability, reduces cation migration barriers, and accelerates electrochemical kinetics. at high mass loading (up to 30 mg cm−2), the defective 1T-VS2 cathode demonstrates excellent capacity retention (220 ma h g−1, 83% retention), remarkable cycling stability (80% retention over 400 cycles at 20 ma cm−2), and superior rate capability. Notably, the material also exhibits outstanding self-charging performance, with a high self-charging efficiency and an impressive self-charging rate, even at a high mass loading of 10 mg cm−2. This work not only underscores the exceptional electrochemical properties of the defective 1T-VS2 cathode but also presents a design strategy that integrates macro-to-micro-scale structural optimization, offering a promising direction for the development of high-performance cathodes in energy storage applications.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105002326268
U2 - 10.1039/d5ee00612k
DO - 10.1039/d5ee00612k
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105002326268
SN - 1754-5692
VL - 18
SP - 3169
EP - 3176
JO - Energy and Environmental Science
JF - Energy and Environmental Science
IS - 7
ER -