Revealing molecular-level surface redox sites of controllably oxidized black phosphorus nanosheets

Bulk and two-dimensional black phosphorus are considered to be promising battery materials due to their high theoretical capacities of 2,600 mAh g −1 . However, their rate and cycling capabilities are limited by the intrinsic (de-)alloying mechanism. Here, we demonstrate a unique surface redox molec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature materials 2019-02, Vol.18 (2), p.156-162
Hauptverfasser: Nakhanivej, Puritut, Yu, Xu, Park, Sul Ki, Kim, Soo, Hong, Jin-Yong, Kim, Hae Jin, Lee, Wonki, Hwang, Jun Yeon, Yang, Ji Eun, Wolverton, Chris, Kong, Jing, Chhowalla, Manish, Park, Ho Seok
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bulk and two-dimensional black phosphorus are considered to be promising battery materials due to their high theoretical capacities of 2,600 mAh g −1 . However, their rate and cycling capabilities are limited by the intrinsic (de-)alloying mechanism. Here, we demonstrate a unique surface redox molecular-level mechanism of P sites on oxidized black phosphorus nanosheets that are strongly coupled with graphene via strong interlayer bonding. These redox-active sites of the oxidized black phosphorus are confined at the amorphorized heterointerface, revealing truly reversible pseudocapacitance (99% of total stored charge at 2,000 mV s −1 ). Moreover, oxidized black-phosphorus-based electrodes exhibit a capacitance of 478 F g –1 (four times greater than black phosphorus) with a rate capability of ~72% (compared to 21.2% for black phosphorus) and retention of ~91% over 50,000 cycles. In situ spectroelectrochemical and theoretical analyses reveal a reversible change in the surface electronic structure and chemical environment of the surface-exposed P redox sites. Black phosphorus is being considered for energy storage but its rate and cycling capabilities are limited by intrinsic (de-)alloying. Molecular-level surface redox sites on oxidized black phosphorus can now be coupled with graphene via strong interlayer bonding.
ISSN:1476-1122
1476-4660
DOI:10.1038/s41563-018-0230-2