First-Principles Study of the Electrochemical Sodiation of Rutile-Type Vanadium Dioxide

26 November 2019, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

We investigate, from first principles, the electrochemical sodiation mechanism of rutile-type vanadium dioxide as a possible electrode material for sodium-ion batteries. The computed voltages are small in comparison to current state-of-the-art sodium-ion battery cathodes, which we can relate to the large space demand of sodium ions in the compact rutile structure and the resulting severe lattice deformations compared to other working metals. Due to the same reason large anisotropic unit cell volume changes are predicted during cycling. We furthermore find a change of the preferred reaction mechanism during discharge, with a switching between insertion- and conversion-type reaction at higher degrees of sodiation. The predicted capacities on the other hand are appreciable, making a further consideration of this material as anode in combination with sodium working metal interesting.

Keywords

sodium-ion battery electrodes
Vanadium Dioxide
density functional theory

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