First-principles study of ternary graphite compounds cointercalated with alkali atoms (Li, Na, and K) and alkylamines towards alkali ion battery applications
Gum-Chol Ri, Chol-Jun Yu, Jin-Song Kim, Song-Nam Hong, Un-Gi Jong,, Mun-Hyok Ri

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to explore the properties of ternary graphite intercalation compounds with alkali atoms and alkylamines, revealing how atomic size influences stability, diffusion, and electronic interactions relevant for alkali ion batteries.
Contribution
It provides a detailed first-principles analysis of ternary GICs with alkali atoms and alkylamines, highlighting stability, diffusion, and electronic properties for battery applications.
Findings
Layer separation decreases with larger alkali atoms.
Stability increases from Li to K in the compounds.
Larger alkali ions diffuse more smoothly in graphite.
Abstract
Using density functional theory calculations, we have investigated the structural, energetic, and electronic properties of ternary graphite intercalation compounds (GICs) containing alkali atoms (AM) and normal alkylamine molecules (nC), denoted as AM-nC-GICs (AM=Li, Na, K, =1, 2, 3, 4). The orthorhombic unit cells have been used to build the models for crystalline stage-I AM-nC-GICs. By performing the variable cell relaxations and the analysis of results, we have found that with the increase in the atomic number of alkali atoms the layer separations decreases in contrast to AM-GICs, while the bond lengths of alkali atoms with graphene layer and nitrogen atom of alkylamine decreases. The formation and interlayer binding energies of AM-nC3-GICs have been calculated, indicating the increase in stability from Li to K. The calculated energy barriers for migration of alkali atoms…
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