Revealing the interfacial kinetic mechanisms in high-entropy doped Na3V2(PO4)3 through electrochemical investigation and distribution of relaxation times

Abstract

We designed a high-entropy doped NASICON cathode, Na3V1.9(CrMoAlZrNi)0.1(PO4)3 and investigate its electrochemical performance for sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) to understand the diffusion mechanism including distribution of relaxation times analysis of interfacial kinetics. This trace doping induces high-entropy mixing at the vanadium site, tuning the lattice and enhancing specific capacity, activating V4+/V5+ redox couple 3.95~V. Interestingly, it delivers a reversible capacity of 119~mAh~g-1 at 0.1~C, and demonstrate excellent stability of 68\% after 1000 cycles at 10~C. The calculated diffusion coefficient values are found within the range of \(10-11\)--\(10-13~cm2\,s-1\). The systematic investigation of temperature and voltage-dependent impedance data using the distribution of relaxation times provides deeper insights into the underlying charge-transfer and transport processes. The full cells with hard carbon delivers 326~Wh~kg-1 (with respect to cathode mass) at ≈3.2~V and retained 79\% capacity after 100 cycles at 2~C. Our study opens new avenues for developing high-entropy doped cathodes for enhanced structural stability, extended redox activity, and optimized electrochemical kinetics for practical implementation of SIBs.

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