| Literature DB >> 32221406 |
Timo Ikonen1, Nathiya Kalidas1, Katja Lahtinen2, Tommi Isoniemi3,4, J Jussi Toppari3, Ester Vázquez5, M Antonia Herrero-Chamorro5, José Luis G Fierro6, Tanja Kallio2, Vesa-Pekka Lehto7.
Abstract
Carbon nanotubes can be utilized in several ways to enhance the performance of silicon-based anodes. In the present work, thermally carbonized mesoporous silicon (TCPSi) microparticles and single-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are conjugated to create a hybrid material that performs as the Li-ion battery anode better than the physical mixture of TCPSi and CNTs. It is found out that the way the conjugation is done has an essential role in the performance of the anode. The conjugation should be made between negatively charged TCPSi and positively charged CNTs. Based on the electrochemical experiments it is concluded that the positive charges, i.e., excess amine groups of the hybrid material interfere with the diffusion of the lithium cations and thus they should be removed from the anode. Through the saturation of the excess positive amine groups on the CNTs with succinic anhydride, the performance of the hybrid material is even further enhanced.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32221406 PMCID: PMC7101375 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62564-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Different samples prepared by combing TCPSi and CNTs in various ways.
| −NH2 | −COOH | Physical mixture (1°) | Conjugation (2°) | SA treatment (3°) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. PM | x | ||||
| 2. Func/PM | PSi | CNT | x | ||
| 3. Func/Conj | PSi | CNT | x | ||
| 4. Rev/Func/PM | CNT | PSi | x | ||
| 5. Rev/Func/Conj | CNT | PSi | x | ||
| 6. Func/Conj/SA | PSi | CNT | x | x | |
| 7. Rev/Func/Conj/SA | CNT | PSi | x | x |
Figure 1Thermogravimetric results of different TCPSi (a) and CNT (b) samples with reference samples. TCPSi-OX and CNT-OX have been oxidized (references for TCPSi-NH2 and CNT-NH2).
Core-electron binding energies of different TCPSi-CNT samples. The relative peak areas in percentage terms are given in parentheses.
| Sample | C1s (eV) | N1s (eV) | O1s (eV) | Si2p (eV) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 284.8 (78) | 400.2 (44) | 532.6 | 99.7(59) | |
| 286.2 (22) | 100.9 (28) | |||
| 102.7 (13) | ||||
| 284.8 (68) | 399.6 (39) | 531.7 | 98.8 (57) | |
| 286.0 (23) | 100.2 (30) | |||
| 102.0 (13) | ||||
| 284.8 (67) | 400.2 | 532.6 | 99.9 (53) | |
| 286.1 (25) | 101.0 (27) | |||
| 102.4 (20) |
Figure 2SEM image of Rev/Func/Conj/SA active material. TCPSi particles are bound together with CNTs at multiple points.
Figure 3Galvanostatic rate capability results for the TCPSi, TCPSi-NH2, PM and Func/Conj samples. The results are shown with average value and standard error (n = 3).
Figure 4Galvanostatic rate capability results for the Func/Conj/SA, Rev/Func/Conj, Rev/Func/PM and Rev/Func/Conj/SA samples. The results are shown with average value and standard error (n = 3).
Figure 5Cyclic voltammetry results for 6th cycle for samples PM, Func/Conj, Rev/Func/Conj, Rev/Func/PM and Rev/Func/Conj/SA.
Figure 6Top: Galvanostatic life cycling data of Rev/Func/Conj/SA. Bottom: Life cycling data of Rev/Func/Conj/SA for electrochemical impedance spectroscopy study. In both cases, capacity was limited and cycling rate was 0.2 C.
Figure 7Nyquist plots for Rev/Func/Conj/SA sample on different cycles.
EC-fit based kinetic parameters for Rev/Func/Conj/SA sample.
| Cycle (V) | 0 (0.21) | 40 (0.42) | 80 (0.23) | 120 (0.23) | 160 (0.30) | 200 (0.30) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Element | ||||||
| 4.2 | 6.6 | 7.0 | 7.8 | 7.8 | 8.4 | |
| 7.8 | 4.0 | 3.9 | 4.6 | 4.8 | 5.1 | |
| 7.9 | 5.1 | 5.1 | 7.3 | 8.1 | 8.7 |