4.6 Article

First-Principles Study of Na Intercalation and Diffusion Mechanisms at 2D MoS2/Graphene Interfaces

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 125, Issue 4, Pages 2276-2286

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c10107

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union (FSE, PON Ricerca e Innovazione 2014-2020, Azione I.1 Dottorati Innovativi con caratterizzazione Industriale)
  2. Italian Ministry of Economic Development
  3. ENEA
  4. Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development
  5. Italian research program
  6. European research program

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Na-ion batteries are emerging energy storage devices, and a hybrid 2D heterojunction of graphene and MoS2 has been proposed as a potential anode material to improve conductivity and mechanical stress resistance. The interaction between MoS2 and graphene, along with the diffusion paths and energy barriers for Na at the interface, are crucial for developing high-performance nanoscale anodes for NIBs. Results show that 3R-MoS2 interacts more favorably with graphene, with lower diffusion barriers compared to 1T-MoS2, providing insights for the design of advanced electrode materials for efficient Na intercalation and diffusion in NIBs.
Na-ion batteries (NIBs) are emerging as promising energy storage devices for large-scale applications. Great research efforts are devoted to design new effective NIB electrode materials, especially for the anode side. A hybrid 2D heterojunction with graphene and MoS2 has been recently proposed for this purpose: while MoS2 has shown good reversible capacity as a NIB anode, graphene is expected to improve conductivity and resistance to mechanical stress upon cycling. The most relevant processes for the anode are the intercalation and diffusion of the large Na ion, whose complex mechanisms are determined by the structural and electronic features of the MoS2/graphene interface. Understanding these processes and mechanisms is crucial for developing new nanoscale anodes for NIBs with high performances. To this end, here we report a state-of-the-art DFT study to address (a) the structural and electronic properties of heterointerfaces between the MoS2 monolayers and graphene, (b) the most convenient insertion sites for Na, and (c) the possible diffusion paths along the interface and the corresponding energy barrier heights. We considered two MoS2 polymorphs: 1T and 3R Our results show that 1T-MoS2 interacts more strongly with graphene than 3R-MoS2. In both cases, the best Na host site is found at the MoS2 side of the interface, and the band structure reveals a proper n-type character of the graphene moiety, which is responsible for electronic conduction. Minimum-energy paths for Na diffusion show very low barrier heights for the 3R-MoS2/graphene interface (<0.25 eV) and much higher values for its 1T counterpart (similar to 0.7 eV). Analysis of structural features along the diffusion transition states allows us to identify the strong coordination of Na with the exposed S atoms as the main feature hindering an effective diffusion in the 1T case. These results provide new hints on the physicochemical details of Na intercalation and diffusion mechanisms at complex 2D heterointerfaces and will help further development of advanced electrode materials for efficient NIBs.

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