Decoupling the air sensitivity of Na-layered oxides
Chinese Academy of Sciences · Institute of Physics · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Air sensitivity remains a substantial barrier to the commercialization of sodium (Na)-layered oxides (NLOs). This problem has puzzled the community for decades because of the complexity of interactions between air components and their impact on both bulk and surfaces of NLOs. We show here that water vapor plays a pivotal role in initiating destructive acid and oxidative degradations of NLOs only when coupled with carbon dioxide or oxygen, respectively. Quantification analysis revealed that reducing the defined cation competition coefficient (η), which integrates the effects of ionic potential and sodium content, and increasing the particle size can enhance the resistance to acid attack, whereas using…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 42.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
23- YYYang YangCorresponding
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- ZWZaifa WangCorresponding
Yanshan University
- CDCongcong Du
Yanshan University
- DKDaniel Kuok Ho Tang
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- XLXinyan Li
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Process Engineering, Institute of Physics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Topics & keywords
- Decoupling (probability)
- Chemistry
- Sodium
- Ionic bonding
- Redox
- Sensitivity (control systems)
- Oxygen
- Materials science
- Clean water and sanitation