Vapor–Solid Reaction Growth of Rutile TiO2 Nanorods and Nanowires for Li-Ion-Battery Electrodes
Author(s) -
Tzu-Yuan Lee,
Chi Young Lee,
HsinTien Chiu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b02453
Subject(s) - nanorod , materials science , rutile , nanowire , anode , nanostructure , nanotechnology , ion , electrochemistry , analytical chemistry (journal) , diffusion , chemical engineering , grain size , electrode , metallurgy , chemistry , organic chemistry , chromatography , engineering , physics , thermodynamics
A new synthetic method to grow O-deficient rutile TiO 2(s) nanorods (NRs) and nanowires (NWs) by a vapor-solid reaction growth method is developed. TiCl 4(g) was employed to react with commercially supplied CaTiO 3(s) (size 2-4 μm) at 973 K under atmospheric pressure to generate TiO 2(s) NRs (diameters 80-120 nm, lengths 1-4 μm). The reaction employing TiCl 4(g) and CaO (s) at 973 K also generated CaTiO 3(s) (size 4-13 μm) as the intermediate which reacted further with TiCl 4(g) to produce NWs (diameters 80-120 nm, lengths 4-15 μm). This is the first report of 1D rutile TiO 2(s) nanostructure with such a high aspect ratio. Both of the NRs and the NWs, with compositions TiO 1.81 and TiO 1.65 , respectively, were single crystals grown in the [001] direction. Their morphology was affected by the reaction temperature, the concentration of TiCl 4(g) , and the particle size of CaTiO 3(s) . The NRs and the NWs were investigated as anode materials for Li + -ion batteries. At constant current rates 1, 2, and 5 C (1 C = 170 mA g -1 ) for 100 cycles, the cycling (1.0-3.0 V) performance data of the NRs were 146, 123, and 104 mA h g -1 , respectively. On the other hand, the cycling performance data of the NWs were 120, 80, and 52 mA h g -1 , respectively. This is attributed to the high Li + ion diffusion rate ( D Li + ) of the NRs (29.52 × 10 -15 cm 2 s -1 ), which exceeds that of the NWs (8.61 × 10 -15 cm 2 s -1 ). Although the [001] growth direction of the NR crystals would provide the fastest channels for the diffusion of Li + ions and enhance the battery capacity, the extremely long channels in the NWs could hamper the diffusion of the Li + ions. The O-deficiency in the structure would increase the conductivity of the electrode material and improve the stable cycling stability of the batteries also. The long-term cycling test at 2 C for the battery constructed from the NRs retained 121 mA h g -1 after 200 cycles and 99.2 mA h g -1 after 800 cycles. The device has an excellent long-term cycling stability with a loss of only 0.04% per cycle.
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