Highly Porous Mn3 O4 Micro/Nanocuboids with In Situ Coated Carbon as Advanced Anode Material for Lithium-Ion Batteries.
Yao JiangJi-Li YueQiubo GuoQiuying XiaChong ZhouTao FengJing XuHui XiaPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2018)
The electrochemical performance of most transition metal oxides based on the conversion mechanism is greatly restricted by inferior cycling stability, rate capability, high overpotential induced by the serious irreversible reactions, low electrical conductivity, and poor ion diffusivity. To mitigate these problems, highly porous Mn3 O4 micro/nanocuboids with in situ formed carbon matrix (denoted as Mn3 O4 @C micro/nanocuboids) are designed and synthesized via a one-pot hydrothermal method, in which glucose plays the roles of a reductive agent and a carbon source simultaneously. The carbon content, particle size, and pore structure in the composite can be facilely controlled, resulting in continuous carbon matrix with abundant pores in the cuboids. The as-fabricated Mn3 O4 @C micro/nanocuboids exhibit large reversible specific capacity (879 mAh g-1 at the current density of 100 mA g-1 ) as well as outstanding cycling stability (86% capacity retention after 500 cycles) and rate capability, making it a potential candidate as anode material for lithium-ion batteries. Moreover, this facile and effective synthetic strategy can be further explored as a universal approach for the synthesis of other hierarchical transition metal oxides and carbon hybrids with subtle structure engineering.