JOURNAL ARTICLE

An Overview of Mixed Polyanionic Cathode Materials for Sodium‐Ion Batteries

Abstract

Abstract “Building better batteries” remains an ongoing process to cater diverse energy demands starting from small‐scale consumer electronics to large‐scale automobiles and grid storage. While Li‐ion batteries have carried this burden over the last three decades, the ever‐growing and highly diverse applications (based on size, energy‐density, and stationary vs mobile usages) have led to an era of “beyond lithium‐ion batteries.” In this postlithium‐battery era, sodium‐ion batteries (NIBs) have emerged as a pragmatic option particularly for large‐scale applications. They attract attention due to the abundance and uniform geographic distribution of sodium‐based minerals, materials/process economy, and well‐known (de)intercalation mechanisms, in particular for stationary applications independent of size/weight restriction. Parallel to the Li‐ion batteries, the cathode (positive electrode) plays a key role in overall performance, leading to the exploration of various layered and 3D framework insertion materials. While layered oxides deliver high capacity, polyanionic hosts offer structural stability, operational safety, and tunable redox potentials. It can be further exploited in “mixed polyanion” cathode materials combining more than one kind of polyanion units. This article focuses on mixed polyanionic cathode materials for NIBs. It renders a sneak‐peek on suites of mixed polyanionic insertion materials discussing their structure, overall electrochemical performance, and future perspectives.

Keywords:
Cathode Battery (electricity) Nanotechnology Materials science Intercalation (chemistry) Electrochemistry Energy storage Lithium (medication) Energy density Process (computing) Electronics Computer science Engineering physics Electrode Electrical engineering Chemistry Engineering Inorganic chemistry Physics

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161
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7.61
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
167
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0.98
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Citation History

Topics

Advancements in Battery Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Extraction and Separation Processes
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
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