Ultrafast Dual-Shock Chemistry Synthesis of Ordered/Disordered Hybrid Carbon Anodes: High-Rate Performance of Li-Ion Batteries.
Pengfei HuangZekun LiLi ChenYuan LiZhedong LiuJingchao ZhangJiawei LuoWenjun ZhangWei-Di LiuXinxi ZhangRongtao ZhuYanan ChenPublished in: ACS nano (2024)
Graphite exhibits crystal anisotropy, which impedes the mass transfer of ion intercalation and extraction processes in Li-ion batteries. Herein, a dual-shock chemical strategy has been developed to synthesize the carbon anode. This approach comprised two key phases: (1) a thermal shock utilizing ultrahigh temperature (3228 K) can thermodynamically facilitate graphitization; (2) a mechanical shock (21.64 MPa) disrupting the π-π interactions in the aromatic chains of carbon can result in hybrid-structured carbon composed of crystalline and amorphous carbon. The optimized carbon (DSC-200-0.3) demonstrates a capacity of 208.61 mAh/g at a 10C rate, with a significant enhancement comparing with 15 mAh/g of the original graphite. Impressively, it maintains 81.06% capacity even after 3000 charge-discharge cycles. Dynamic process analysis reveals that this superior rate performance is attributed to a larger interlayer spacing facilitating ion transport comparing with the original graphite, disordered amorphous carbon for additional lithium storage sites, and crystallized carbon for enhanced charge transfer. The dual-shock chemical approach offers a cost-effective and efficient method to rapidly produce hybrid-structured carbon anodes, enabling 10C fast charging capabilities in lithium-ion batteries.