| Literature DB >> 31036907 |
Chaojiang Niu1, Huilin Pan1, Wu Xu1, Jie Xiao1, Ji-Guang Zhang1, Langli Luo1, Chongmin Wang1, Donghai Mei1, Jiashen Meng2, Xuanpeng Wang2, Ziang Liu2, Liqiang Mai2, Jun Liu3.
Abstract
Despite considerable efforts to stabilize lithium metal anode structures and prevent dendrite formation, achieving long cycling life in high-energy batteries under realistic conditions remains extremely difficult due to a combination of complex failure modes that involve accelerated anode degradation and the depletion of electrolyte and lithium metal. Here we report a self-smoothing lithium-carbon anode structure based on mesoporous carbon nanofibres, which, coupled with a lithium nickel-manganese-cobalt oxide cathode with a high nickel content, can lead to a cell-level energy density of 350-380 Wh kg-1 (counting all the active and inactive components) and a stable cycling life up to 200 cycles. These performances are achieved under the realistic conditions required for practical high-energy rechargeable lithium metal batteries: cathode loading ≥4.0 mAh cm-2, negative to positive electrode capacity ratio ≤2 and electrolyte weight to cathode capacity ratio ≤3 g Ah-1. The high stability of our anode is due to the amine functionalization and the mesoporous carbon structures that favour smooth lithium deposition.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31036907 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-019-0427-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213