Vanadium-driven oxygen vacancy modulation in MoO3 nanosheet cathodes for aqueous zinc-ion batteries
Abstract
Vanadium-doped MoO3 (VMO) nanosheets with oxygen-vacancy-rich structures was synthesized via a hydrothermal route, where systematic control of doping concentration, reaction temperature, and time yielded nanosheet-stacked morphologies with enhanced surface area. The optimized sample, VMO (0.1 : 1), exhibited a specific surface area of 23.67 m2 g−1 and delivered a high reversible capacity of 213 mA h g−1 at 1 A g−1, together with excellent cycling stability, retaining 76% and 68% capacity after 2500 and 5000 cycles at 5 and 10 A g−1, respectively. Ex situ characterization studies confirmed the coexistence of Zn2+ intercalation/deintercalation and H+ participation, with kinetic analyses revealing diffusion-controlled H+ storage and pseudocapacitive Zn2+ behavior. Moreover, density functional theory (DFT) calculations revealed that vanadium doping in MoO3 reduces the bandgap, thereby enhancing electronic conductivity, and simultaneously lowers the Zn2+ migration barrier, facilitating ion transport. These results highlight vanadium doping as an effective strategy to enhance the electrochemical performance and structural stability of MoO3, providing new insights into cathode design for advanced aqueous zinc-ion batteries.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Advanced aqueous batteries

Please wait while we load your content...