Abstract The passivation issue of Fe2O3 electrode has triggered off their low practical capacity, poor rate capability and cycling performance and thus limited their practical application as anodes for alkaline… Click to show full abstract
Abstract The passivation issue of Fe2O3 electrode has triggered off their low practical capacity, poor rate capability and cycling performance and thus limited their practical application as anodes for alkaline Ni-Fe batteries. This paper proposes a dual modification of Fe2O3 by in-situ sulfurization and post carbon coating. Fe2O3-S nanorod arrays with a uniform sulfurization layer coated on Fe2O3 core were firstly fabricated by in-situ sulfurization of Fe2O3 nanorod arrays grown on Ti foil. After coating carbon on the Fe2O3-S arrays by PECVD process, Fe2O3-S@C were obtained. Electrochemical tests in alkaline electrolyte in the potential window of −1.2∼0 V show that the Fe2O3-S@C exhibited dramatically improved discharge capacity (60.5 times compared to Fe2O3), cycling stability (92.2% for Fe2O3-S@C and only 7.9% for Fe2O3-S after 100 cycles) and excellent rate capability, owing to the co-contribution of the sulfurization layer and carbon layer. Furthermore, a Ni-Fe cell is assembled by pairing with a Ni2S3 cathode, and delivers high energy/power density (45.64 Wh/kg at 1.3 kW/kg and 27.14 Wh/kg at 10.3 kW/kg).
               
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