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Facile Fabrication of Porous Si Microspheres from Low‐Cost Precursors for High‐Capacity Electrode
Author(s) -
Geng Liyuan,
Yang Dandan,
Gao Shilun,
Zhang Zhaoxiang,
Sun Feiyuan,
Pan Yiyang,
Li Shaoqi,
Li Xiaohua,
Cao PengFei,
Yang Huabin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced materials interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.671
H-Index - 65
ISSN - 2196-7350
DOI - 10.1002/admi.201901726
Subject(s) - materials science , fabrication , graphite , electrode , porosity , nanotechnology , raw material , coating , electrochemistry , carbon fibers , nanometre , chemical engineering , amorphous solid , composite material , composite number , medicine , chemistry , alternative medicine , organic chemistry , pathology , engineering
Comparing with nanometer‐sized Si (nano‐Si), the micrometer‐sized Si (micro‐Si) is more promising for the practical applications due to its low cost and scalable production method. Fabrication of micro‐Si with porous architecture can efficiently alleviate the high mechanical stress and severe mechanical fracture. Till now, it is still a challenge to achieve porous micro‐Si with controlled morphology, such as microsphere, from a cost‐efficient and environmentally friendly approach. Herein, a facile approach on fabricating Si microsphere with porous architecture via a low‐temperature aluminothermic reduction (LTAR) method using the low‐cost fumed silica (FS) as raw material is introduced. After compositing with graphite and then coating with amorphous carbon, the Si FS /graphite@carbon (Si FS /G@C) electrode displays superior reversible capacity (730 mAh g −1 after 100 cycles) and excellent rate capability (729.1 mAh g −1 at 1 A g −1 ). The electrochemical performance is much better than that of Si‐microparticles/G@C (Mic‐Si/G@C, 368 mAh g −1 at 100 mA g −1 after 100 cycles). These results show the great potential of Si FS /G@C electrode as an alternative high‐performance electrode material for lithium ion batteries. Moreover, the LTAR adopted in the current study significantly reduces the energy consumption for preparation of Si microspheres from low‐cost raw materials.