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      Interconnected hollow carbon nanospheres for stable lithium metal anodes.

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          Abstract

          For future applications in portable electronics, electric vehicles and grid storage, batteries with higher energy storage density than existing lithium ion batteries need to be developed. Recent efforts in this direction have focused on high-capacity electrode materials such as lithium metal, silicon and tin as anodes, and sulphur and oxygen as cathodes. Lithium metal would be the optimal choice as an anode material, because it has the highest specific capacity (3,860 mAh g(-1)) and the lowest anode potential of all. However, the lithium anode forms dendritic and mossy metal deposits, leading to serious safety concerns and low Coulombic efficiency during charge/discharge cycles. Although advanced characterization techniques have helped shed light on the lithium growth process, effective strategies to improve lithium metal anode cycling remain elusive. Here, we show that coating the lithium metal anode with a monolayer of interconnected amorphous hollow carbon nanospheres helps isolate the lithium metal depositions and facilitates the formation of a stable solid electrolyte interphase. We show that lithium dendrites do not form up to a practical current density of 1 mA cm(-2). The Coulombic efficiency improves to ∼ 99% for more than 150 cycles. This is significantly better than the bare unmodified samples, which usually show rapid Coulombic efficiency decay in fewer than 100 cycles. Our results indicate that nanoscale interfacial engineering could be a promising strategy to tackle the intrinsic problems of lithium metal anodes.

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          Most cited references34

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          Nonaqueous liquid electrolytes for lithium-based rechargeable batteries.

          Kang Xu (2004)
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            High-performance lithium battery anodes using silicon nanowires.

            There is great interest in developing rechargeable lithium batteries with higher energy capacity and longer cycle life for applications in portable electronic devices, electric vehicles and implantable medical devices. Silicon is an attractive anode material for lithium batteries because it has a low discharge potential and the highest known theoretical charge capacity (4,200 mAh g(-1); ref. 2). Although this is more than ten times higher than existing graphite anodes and much larger than various nitride and oxide materials, silicon anodes have limited applications because silicon's volume changes by 400% upon insertion and extraction of lithium which results in pulverization and capacity fading. Here, we show that silicon nanowire battery electrodes circumvent these issues as they can accommodate large strain without pulverization, provide good electronic contact and conduction, and display short lithium insertion distances. We achieved the theoretical charge capacity for silicon anodes and maintained a discharge capacity close to 75% of this maximum, with little fading during cycling.
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              • Record: found
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              The Electrochemical Behavior of Alkali and Alkaline Earth Metals in Nonaqueous Battery Systems—The Solid Electrolyte Interphase Model

              E Peled (1979)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nat Nanotechnol
                Nature nanotechnology
                1748-3395
                1748-3387
                Aug 2014
                : 9
                : 8
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-5025, USA.
                [2 ] Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford, California 94305-4034, USA.
                [3 ] Department of Applied Physics, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
                [4 ] Department of Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
                [5 ] 1] Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford, California 94305-4034, USA [2] Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA.
                Article
                nnano.2014.152
                10.1038/nnano.2014.152
                25064396
                6fd07dd8-b190-4d51-8245-69200ca94958
                History

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