Computational insight of lithium adsorption and intercalation in bilayer TiC3

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2024

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Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd

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Metallurgical and Materials Engineering
(2004)
The main fields of operation for Metallurgical and Materials Engineering are production of engineering materials, defining and improving their features, as well as developing new materials to meet the expectations at every aspect of life and the users from these aspects. Founded in 2004 and graduated its 10th-semester alumni in 2018, our Department also obtained MÜDEK accreditation in the latter year. Offering the opportunity to hold an internationally valid diploma through the accreditation in question, our Department has highly qualified and experienced Academic Staff. Many of the courses offered at our Department are supported with various practice sessions, and internship studies in summer. This way, we help our students become better-equipped engineers for their future professional lives. With the Cooperative Education curriculum that entered into effect in 2019, students may volunteer to work at contracted companies for a period of six months with no extensions to their period of study.

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Lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) have gained significant attention owing to their long lifespan. However, these batteries offer unmatched energy storage capacity and suffer from restricted lithium-ion mobility within the electrodes. Here, we employ first-principles calculation to investigate the two-dimensional TiC3 bilayer material. The results exhibit a remarkably high specific capacity of 1277 mAh/g and a low diffusion energy barrier of 0.12 eV. The TiC3 bilayer is anticipated to show high electrical conductivity, maintaining its metallicity due to strong bonding with four Li atoms. Additionally, its high thermal and dynamic stabilities are expected to significantly enhance the battery performance. Notably, the AB stacking bilayer TiC3 experiences a mere 6.01 % increase in volume, considerably smaller compared to the 28 % increase observed in the SiC bilayer. This suggests that TiC3 bilayers remain intact even at the highest concentration of lithium adsorptions. We also explored the solidelectrolyte interface (SEI) formation at the outset of battery operation using reactive force field molecular dynamics simulation. The reactive products of SEI are nicely matched with previous experimental and theoretical findings. All these intriguing properties position the TiC3 bilayer as an exceptionally promising material for use in LIBs.

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Park, Jongee/0000-0003-1415-6906

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MXenes, TiC3 bilayer, Lithium-ion battery, First-principles

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477

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