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A Well-Defined Silicon Nanocone-Carbon Structure for Demonstrating Exclusive Influences of Carbon Coating on Silicon Anode of Lithium-Ion Batteries.

Chao WangFei LuoHao LuXiaohui RongBonan LiuGeng ChuYu SunBaogang QuanJieyun ZhengJunjie LiChangzhi GuXinping QiuHong LiLiquan Chen
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
Nanotechnology and carbon coating have been applied to silicon anodes to achieve excellent lithium-ion batteries, but the exclusive influence of carbon coating on solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation is difficult to exhibit distinctly because of the impurity and morphological irregularity of most nanostructured anodes. Here, we design a silicon nanocone-carbon (SNC-C) composite structure as a model anode to demonstrate the significant influences of carbon coating on SEI formation and electrochemical performance, unaffectedly as a result of pure electrode component and distinctly due to regular nanocone morphology. As demonstrated by morphological and elemental analysis, compared to the SNC electrode, the SNC-C electrode maintains a thinner SEI layer (∼10 nm) and more stable structure during cycling as well as longer cycle life (>725 cycles), higher Coulombic efficiency (>99%), and lower electrode polarization. This well-defined structure clearly shows the interface stability attributed to carbon coating and is promising in fundamental research of the silicon anode.
Keyphrases
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