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    Flux Growth and Characterization of Bulk InVO4 Crystals
    (Basel : MDPI, 2023) Voloshyna, Olesia; Gorbunov, Mikhail V.; Mikhailova, Daria; Maljuk, Andrey; Seiro, Silvia; Büchner, Bernd
    The flux growth of InVO4 bulk single crystals has been explored for the first time. The reported eutectic composition at a ratio of V2O5:InVO4 = 1:1 could not be used as a self-flux since no sign of melting was observed up to 1100 °C. Crystals of InVO4 of typical size 0.5 × 1 × 7 mm3 were obtained using copper pyrovanadate (Cu2V2O7) as a flux, using Pt crucibles. X-ray powder diffraction confirmed the orthorhombic Cmcm structure. Rests of the flux material were observed on the sample surface, with occasional traces of Pt indicating some level of reaction with the crucible. X-ray absorption spectroscopy showed that oxidation states of indium and vanadium ions are +3 and +5, respectively. The size and high quality of the obtained InVO4 crystals makes them excellent candidates for further study of their physical properties.
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    Sodium-Vanadium Bronze Na9V14O35: An Electrode Material for Na-Ion Batteries
    (Basel : MDPI, 2021) Kirsanova, Maria A.; Akmaev, Alexey S.; Gorbunov, Mikhail V.; Mikhailova, Daria; Abakumov, Artem M.
    Na9V14O35 (η-NaxV2O5) has been synthesized via solid-state reaction in an evacuated sealed silica ampoule and tested as electroactive material for Na-ion batteries. According to powder X-ray diffraction, electron diffraction and atomic resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy, Na9V14O35 adopts a monoclinic structure consisting of layers of corner- and edge-sharing VO5 tetragonal pyramids and VO4 tetrahedra with Na cations positioned between the layers, and can be considered as sodium vanadium(IV,V) oxovanadate Na9V104.1+O19(V5+O4)4. Behavior of Na9V14O35 as a positive and negative electrode in Na half-cells was investigated by galvanostatic cycling against metallic Na, synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction and electron energy loss spectroscopy. Being charged to 4.6 V vs. Na+/Na, almost 3 Na can be extracted per Na9V14O35 formula, resulting in electrochemical capacity of ~60 mAh g−1. Upon discharge below 1 V, Na9V14O35 uptakes sodium up to Na:V = 1:1 ratio that is accompanied by drastic elongation of the separation between the layers of the VO4 tetrahedra and VO5 tetragonal pyramids and volume increase of about 31%. Below 0.25 V, the ordered layered Na9V14O35 structure transforms into a rock-salt type disordered structure and ultimately into amorphous products of a conversion reaction at 0.1 V. The discharge capacity of 490 mAh g−1 delivered at first cycle due to the conversion reaction fades with the number of charge-discharge cycles.
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    Voltage hysteresis loop as a fingerprint of slow kinetics Co2+-to-Co3+ transition in layered NaxCox/2Ti1−x/2O2 cathodes for sodium batteries
    (London [u.a.] : RSC, 2022) Mikhailova, Daria; Gorbunov, Mikhail V.; An Nguyen, Hoang Bao; Pohle, Björn; Maletti, Sebastian; Heubner, Christian
    Sodium transition metal oxides are one of the most promising cathode materials for future sodium ion batteries. Chemical flexibility of layered Na-oxides including cobalt enables its partial substitution by other redox-active or non-active metals, often leading to structural stabilization. Sharing the same structural positions with other transition metals in layered oxides, Co can be double- or triple-charged, and as Co3+ can adopt a low-spin (LS), intermediate-spin (IS), high-spin (HS) state, or a combination of them. Using Ti4+ in the structure together with Co2+ results in a reduced number of phase transformations compared to Ti-free compositions. However, a large potential hysteresis of about 1.5-2.5 V between battery charge and discharge is observed, pointing a first-order cooperative phase transition. Based on several examples, we found that Na extraction from NaxCox/2Ti1−x/2O2 materials with high-spin HS-Co2+, crystallizing in the P2 or O3 structure, mostly results in valence and spin-state transition of Co, leading to the formation of a second phase with a low-spin LS-Co3+, and a much smaller unit cell volume. We elucidated a kinetic origin of the potential hysteresis, which can be minimized by increasing temperature or reduction of the current density during battery cycling with P2- and O3-Na0.67Co0.33Ti0.67O2 materials. The slow kinetics of the structural phase transition, especially upon Na-insertion, hampers the application of classical methods of electrochemical thermodynamics, such as determining the entropic potential dE/dT. We showed that the entropic potential depends only on the Na-content in NaxCo0.33Ti0.67O2 during battery charge or discharge, what additionally confirms a kinetic nature of the potential hysteresis.