Zhiyong WangMelissa A. FierkeAndreas Stein
A monolithic, three-dimensionally ordered macroporous/mesoporous carbon/tin (IV) oxide (3DOM/m ) nanocomposite was prepared and tested as an anode material for lithium-ion batteries. A macro-/mesoporous glassy carbon (3DOM/m C) monolith was first synthesized from a triconstituent precursor, using a polymer colloidal crystal and a nonionic surfactant as the templates for macropores and mesopores, respectively. Tin (IV) oxide nanocrystals were then introduced into the mesopores of the carbon monolith via an infiltration-hydrolysis process while maintaining connections between macropores. The composite electrode exhibited superior reversible lithium capacity over a carbon/tin dioxide electrode without any designed mesostructure and also over similarly templated glassy carbon electrodes lacking the tin oxide component. The initial discharge capacity was and remained above for at . The formation of stable solid-electrolyte interphase layers contributed to the good cycleability of 3DOM/m . The structural and morphological changes of the electrode after cycling were evaluated by scanning and transmission electron microscopy and by X-ray diffraction.
Yunhua XuYujie ZhuYihang LiuChunsheng Wang
Mengyuan LiChunling LiuYan WangWen‐Sheng Dong
Xian ZhuZhanhu GuoPeng ZhangGuo Dong DuRong ZengZhi ChenSean LiHuan Liu
Siti Munirah HasanalyAhmad Nazeer Che MatKhaulah Sulaiman
Chia‐Chin ChangHuang SuJui-Pin YenChien‐Ming Lee