Artículos de revistas
Electrochemical behavior of lithium intercalated in a molybdenum disulfide-crown ether nanocomposite
Date
2007-06-02Registration in:
Electrochimica Acta 53, pp.1432–1438, 2007
0013-4686
Author
Santa Ana, María Angélica
Mirabal, N.
Benavente Espinosa, Eglantina
Gómez Romero, Pedro
González Moraga, Guillermo
Institutions
Abstract
A new nanocomposite, obtained from the intercalation of the cyclic ether 12-Crown-4 into MoS2, Li0.32MoS2(12-Crown-4)0.19, is described. The
laminar product has an interlaminar distance of 14.4A° . The electrical conductivity of the nanocomposite varies from2.5×10−2 to 4.3×10−2 S cm−1
in the range 25–77 ◦C, being about four times higher than the analogous poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) derivative at room temperature. The electrochemical
step-wise galvanostatic intercalation or de-intercalation of lithium, leading to LixMoS2(12-Crown-4)0.19 with x in the range 0.07–1.0,
indicates a Li/Li+ pair average potential of 2.8V. The electrochemical lithium diffusion coefficients in the crown ether intercalates, determined by
galvanostatic pulse relaxation between 15 and 37 ◦C at different lithium intercalation degrees, are higher than those of the PEO derivatives under
similar conditions, being however the diffusion mechanism rather more complex. The variation of both, the lithium diffusion activation enthalpy
and the quasi-equilibrium potentials, with the lithium content shows there are two different limit behaviors, at low and high lithium intercalation
degree, respectively. These features are discussed by considering the high stability of the Li-crown ether complex and the different chemical
environments found by lithium along the intercalation process.