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Hybrid capacitive deionization (HCDI), which combines a capacitive carbon electrode and a redox active electrode in a single device, has emerged as a promising method for water desalination, enabling higher ion removal capacity than devices containing two carbon electrodes. However, to date, the desalination performance of few redox active materials has been reported. For the first time, we present the electrochemical behavior of manganese oxide nanowires with four different tunnel crystal structures as faradaic electrodes in HCDI cells. Two of these phases are square tunnel structured manganese oxides, α-MnO2 and todorokite-MnO2. The other two phases have novel structures that cross-sectional scanning transmission electron microscopy analysis revealed to have ordered and disordered combinations of structural tunnels with different dimensions. The ion removal performance of the nanowires was evaluated not only in NaCl solution, which is traditionally used in laboratory experiments, but also in KCl and MgCl2 solutions, providing better understanding of the behavior of these materials for desalination of brackish water that contains multiple cation species. High ion removal capacities (as large as 27.8 mg g−1, 44.4 mg g−1, and 43.1 mg g−1 in NaCl, KCl, and MgCl2 solutions, respectively) and high ion removal rates (as large as 0.112 mg g−1 s−1, 0.165 mg g−1 s−1, and 0.164 mg g−1 s−1 in NaCl, KCl, and MgCl2 solutions, respectively) were achieved. By comparing ion removal capacity to structural tunnel size, it was found that smaller tunnels do not favor the removal of cations with larger hydrated radii, and more efficient removal of larger hydrated cations can be achieved by utilizing manganese oxides with larger structural tunnels. Extended HCDI cycling and ex situ X-ray diffraction analysis revealed the excellent stability of the manganese oxide electrodes in repeated ion removal/ion release cycles, and compositional analysis of the electrodes indicated that ion removal is achieved through both surface redox reactions and intercalation of ions into the structural tunnels. This work contributes to the understanding of the behavior of faradaic materials in electrochemical water desalination and elucidates the relationship between the electrode material crystal structure and the ion removal capacity/ion removal rate in various salt solutions.more » « less
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Polymorphic 1D MnO2nanostructures are widely applied in fields such as catalysis, sensing, and energy storage with the functionality mainly determined by the atomic patterns of their laterally exposed facets, which largely remain unclear so far. Herein, by high‐resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) imaging directly along their axial directions, the atomic structures of the outmost lateral facets of polymorphic MnO2nanowires are disclosed. To generalize the findings, four most commonly seen phases with characteristic tunnel structures are targeted, i.e., β‐, γ‐, α‐, and todorokite(t)‐MnO2, which are synthesized conventionally using a hydrothermal method reported in the literature. Axially imaging these MnO2nanowires via HRTEM, the {hkl} facets covering the lateral surfaces are accurately indexed, the atomic pattern of each {hkl} facet is revealed, and it is further coupled with the outmost tunnel configuration that can significantly affect the physicochemical property of MnO2materials via tunnel‐driven mass adsorption/transport. This work provides a reliable reference for atomic modeling of MnO2to benefit the pursuit of its structure–property relationship; in addition, it can benefit surface engineering strategies to better rationalize the facet growth control with optimized functionality.