Silica (SiO) shows promise as anode material for lithium-ion batteries due to its low cost, comparable lithium storage discharge potential and high theoretical capacity (approximately 1961 mA h g). However, it is plagued by issues of low electrochemical activity, low conductivity and severe volume expansion. To address these challenges, we initially coat SiO with CoO, followed by introducing SiO@CoO into graphene sheets to fabricate an anode composite material (SiO@CoO/GS) with uniformly dispersed particles and a 3D graphene wrapped yolk-shell structure. The coating of CoO on SiO converted the negative surface charge of SiO to positive, enabling effective electrostatic interactions between SiO@CoO and graphene oxide sheets, which provided essential prerequisites for synthesizing composite materials with uniformly dispersed particles and good coating effects. Furthermore, the Co-metal formed during the charge-discharge process can act as a catalyst and electron transfer medium, activating the lithium storage activity of SiO and enhancing the conductivity of the electrode, conclusively achieving a higher lithium storage capacity. Ultimately, due to the activation of SiO by Co-metal during cycling and the excellent synergistic effect between SiO@CoO and graphene, SiO@CoO/GS delivers a high reversible capacity of 738 mA h g after 500 cycles at 200 mA g. The product also demonstrates excellent rate performance with a reversible capacity of 206 mA h g at a high specific current of 12.8 A g. The outstanding rate performance of SiO@CoO/GS may be ascribed to the pseudo-capacitive contribution at high specific current upon cycling.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11417458 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4ra04236k | DOI Listing |
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