Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7934715 | Progress in Natural Science: Materials International | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The poor cycling stability of antimony during a repeated sodium ion insertion and desertion process is the key issue, which leads to an unsatisfactory application as an anode material in a sodium-ion battery. Addressed at this, we report a facile two-step method to coat antimony nanoparticles with an ultrathin carbon layer of few nanometers (denoted Sb@C NPs) for sodium-ion battery anode application. This carbon layer could buffer the volume change of antimony in the charge-discharge process and improve the battery cycle performance. Meanwhile, this carbon coating could also enhance the interfacial stability by firmly connecting the sodium alginate binders through its oxygen-rich surface. Benefitted from these advantages, an improved initial discharge capacity (788.5â¯mAâ¯hâ¯gâ1) and cycling stability capacity (553â¯mAâ¯hâ¯gâ1 after 50 times cycle) have been obtained in a battery using Sb@C NPs as anode materials at 50â¯mAâ¯gâ1.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Authors
Jianmin Feng, Liqun Wang, Dejun Li, Pengyi Lu, Feng Hou, Ji Liang,