Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1731451 | Energy | 2016 | 11 Pages |
•Non-biodegradable plastic converted into anode material for lithium-ion batteries.•PVC-derived kish graphite shows nanostructured carbon forms embedded in it.•The graphite gives a first-cycle capacity of 444 mAhg−1 and sustains >500 cycles.•The product is thermally more stable than a commercial lithium battery graphite.•Possibility of converting plastic waste into a technologically useful product.
Graphitic carbon continues to dominate as the choice anode material in lithium-ion batteries despite its theoretical specific capacity of 372 mAhg−1. Tailored forms of graphite with higher practical capacities should, therefore, be of interest to the industry. This paper reports the production of a kish graphitic anode material from polyvinyl chloride by simultaneous carbonization of the polymer and dissolution of the resulting carbon in an iron melt to produce a supersaturated solution of carbon in iron, and subsequent precipitation of the carbon as graphite upon cooling. Our study presents a process for converting non-biodegradable plastic wastes that litter our surroundings into a technologically useful product. The new material exhibits a first-cycle reversible capacity of 444 mAhg−1 and sustains at least 200 cycles at C/10 rate before its capacity drops below 372 mAhg−1.