| Literature DB >> 27936645 |
Biao Kong1, Lianhai Zu2,3, Chengxin Peng3,4, Yan Zhang2, Wei Zhang1, Jing Tang5, Cordelia Selomulya6, Liudi Zhang7, Hanxing Chen1, Yang Wang6, Yang Liu1, Haili He1, Jing Wei6, Xiaocheng Lin6, Wei Luo1, Jianping Yang6, Zaiwang Zhao1, Yong Liu1, Jinhu Yang2,3, Dongyuan Zhao1,6.
Abstract
High-power sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) with long-term cycling attract increasing attention for large-scale energy storage. However, traditional SIBs toward practical applications still suffer from low rate capability and poor cycle induced by pulverization and amorphorization of anodes at high rate (over 5 C) during the fast ion insertion/extraction process. The present work demonstrates a robust strategy for a variety of (Sb-C, Bi-C, Sn-C, Ge-C, Sb-Bi-C) freestanding metal-carbon framework thin films via a space-confined superassembly (SCSA) strategy. The sodium-ion battery employing the Sb-C framework exhibits an unprecedented performance with a high specific capacity of 246 mAh g-1, long life cycle (5000 cycles), and superb capacity retention (almost 100%) at a high rate of 7.5 C (3.51A g-1). Further investigation indicates that the unique framework structure enables unusual reversible crystalline-phase transformation, guaranteeing the fast and long-cyclability sodium storage. This study may open an avenue to developing long-cycle-life and high-power SIBs for practical energy applications.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27936645 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6b10782
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419