| Literature DB >> 28548100 |
Mateusz Odziomek1,2, Frédéric Chaput1, Anna Rutkowska3, Konrad Świerczek3, Danuta Olszewska3, Maciej Sitarz2, Frédéric Lerouge1, Stephane Parola1.
Abstract
High-performance Li-ion batteries require materials with well-designed and controlled structures on nanometre and micrometre scales. Electrochemical properties can be enhanced by reducing crystallite size and by manipulating structure and morphology. Here we show a method for preparing hierarchically structured Li4Ti5O12 yielding nano- and microstructure well-suited for use in lithium-ion batteries. Scalable glycothermal synthesis yields well-crystallized primary 4-8 nm nanoparticles, assembled into porous secondary particles. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy reveals presence of Ti+4 only; combined with chemical analysis showing lithium deficiency, this suggests oxygen non-stoichiometry. Electron microscopy confirms hierarchical morphology of the obtained material. Extended cycling tests in half cells demonstrates capacity of 170 mAh g-1 and no sign of capacity fading after 1,000 cycles at 50C rate (charging completed in 72 s). The particular combination of nanostructure, microstructure and non-stoichiometry for the prepared lithium titanate is believed to underlie the observed electrochemical performance of material.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28548100 PMCID: PMC5458554 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1The obtained lithium titanate phase.
(a,b) Photographs of purified material in form of dried powder and in form of colloidal solution in ethanol. (c) XRD pattern (CuKα) performed on dried powder exhibiting broad peaks of pure lithium titanate phase due to the nanoparticulate character of the material. Red plot at the bottom represents the residual after fitting.
Figure 2Hierarchical structure of the material.
(a) High-resolution TEM shows well-crystalized NPs. Scale bar, 10 nm. (b) High-magnification TEM image of single spherical aggregate. Scale bar, 20 nm. (c) TEM image of highly porous, sponge-like structure composed of spherical aggregates of fine particles. Scale bar, 500 nm. (d) SEM picture shows overall structure of spherical particles arranged into larger structures. Scale bar, 1 μm. The drawings schematically represent the observed three levels of particle arrangement with small NPs aggregated into spherical structures (150–500 nm size), which gather into even larger structures.
Figure 3Electrochemical performance.
(a) Charge/discharge profiles for Li/Li+/LTO battery cycled at C/2 current rate. (b) Initial 1,000 cycles of Li/Li+/LTO battery at 50C current rate. The current density was 8.76 A g−1. (c) selected charge/discharge profiles for Li/Li+/LTO battery cycled at 50C current rate. (d) Discharge capacity of the Li/Li+/LTO battery charged at 500C and discharged at 50C current rate.
Comparison with cycling data from literature.
| Nano-sized hierarchical Li3.5Ti5O12 (present work) | 170 | 1,000–0% | — | — |
| Nanograins coated by carbon | 128,8 | 500–7.4% (10C) | — | — |
| N-doped 2D wavelike with carbon joints | 151 | 150–6.5% | — | — |
| Assembly on nanowires | — | — | 125 (60C) | 5,000–17% (20C) |
| N-doped, carbon-coated nanocomposite | ≈110 | 300–5% (10C) | — | — |
| Core-shell LTO/C | 101 | 250–11% (1C) | — | — |
| NPs | — | — | 175 | 1,000–11% (100C) |
| NanoLTO | ≈130 | — | — | — |
2D, two-dimensional; LTO, Li4Ti5O12; NP, nanoparticle.
Present work is summarized in first line, references indicated for previous results from literature.