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Low-content SnO 2 nanodots on N-doped graphene: lattice-confinement preparation and high-performance lithium/sodium storage.

Shuaipeng LiuYan DongChengwei DengFeijiang ChenYu SuSheng-Yi LiSailong Xu
Published in: Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003) (2023)
Rational construction of nanosized anode nanomaterials is crucial to enhance the electrochemical performance of lithium-/sodium-ion batteries (LIBs/SIBs). Various anode nanoparticles are created mainly via templating surface confinement, or encapsulation within precursors (such as metal-organic frameworks). Herein, low-content SnO 2 nanodots on N-doped reduced graphene oxide (SnO 2 @N-rGO) were prepared as anode nanomaterials for LIBs and SIBs, via a distinctive lattice confinement of a CoAlSn-layered double hydroxide (CoAlSn-LDH) precursor. The SnO 2 @N-rGO composite exhibits the advantagous features of low-content (17.9 wt%) and uniform SnO 2 nanodots (3.0 ± 0.5 nm) resulting from the lattice confinement of the Co and Al species to the surrounded Sn within the same crystalline layer, and high-content conductive rGO. The SnO 2 @N-rGO composite delivers a highly reversible capacity of 1146.2 mA h g -1 after 100 cycles at 0.1 A g -1 for LIBs, and 387 mA h g -1 after 100 cycles at 0.1 A g -1 for SIBs, outperforming N-rGO. Furthermore, the dominant capacitive contribution and the rapid electronic and ionic transfer, as well as small volume variation, all give rise to the enhancement. Precursor-based lattice confinement could thus be an effective strategy for designing and preparing uniform nanodots as anode nanomaterials for electrochemical energy storage.
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