| Literature DB >> 31424917 |
Guolin Hou1, Benli Cheng1, Yijun Yang2, Yu Du1,3, Yihui Zhang2, Baoqiang Li1, Jiaping He1, Yunzhan Zhou2,4, Ding Yi2, Nana Zhao2, Yoshio Bando5, Dmitri Golberg6, Jiannian Yao4,5, Xi Wang2, Fangli Yuan1,7.
Abstract
Silicon-carbon (Si-C) hybrids have been proven to be the most promising anodes for the next-generation lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) due to their superior theoretical capacity (∼4200 mAh g-1). However, it is still a critical challenge to apply this material for commercial LIB anodes because of the large volume expansion of Si, unstable solid-state interphase (SEI) layers, and huge internal stresses upon lithiation/delithiation. Here, we propose an engineering concept of multiscale buffering, taking advantage of a nanosized Si-C nanowire architecture through fabricating specific microsized wool-ball frameworks to solve all the above-mentioned problems. These wool-ball-like frameworks, prepared at high yields, nearly matching industrial scales (they can be routinely produced at a rate of ∼300 g/h), are composed of Si/C nanowire building blocks. As anodes, the Si-C wool-ball frameworks show ultrastable Li+ storage (2000 mAh g-1 for 1000 cycles), high initial Coulombic efficiency of ∼90%, and volumetric capacity of 1338 mAh cm-3. In situ TEM proves that the multiscale buffering design enables a small volume variation, only ∼19.5%, reduces the inner stresses, and creates a very thin SEI. The perfect multiscale elastic buffering makes this material more stable compared to common Si nanoparticle-assembled counterpart electrodes.Entities:
Keywords: Li-ion batteries; in situ TEM; multiscale buffering engineering; silicon anode; ultrastable Li-ion storage
Year: 2019 PMID: 31424917 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b03355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881