JOURNAL ARTICLE

Pyrolyzed Polysiloxanes for Use as Anode Materials in Lithium‐Ion Batteries

Weibing XingA. M. WilsonK. EguchiGregg A. ZankJ. R. Dahn

Year: 1997 Journal:   Journal of The Electrochemical Society Vol: 144 (7)Pages: 2410-2416   Publisher: Institute of Physics

Abstract

More than sixty siloxane polymers containing various organofunctional siloxane units were synthesized. The synthesized siloxane polymers were pyrolyzed in inert gas at 1000°C. Chemical analysis showed that the products of pyrolysis were distributed over a well‐defined region in the Si‐C‐O Gibbs phase diagram. The electrochemical and structural properties of these materials were measured using coin‐type test cells and x‐ray powder diffraction, respectively. The most interesting materials are found near the line in the Si‐C‐O Gibbs triangle connecting carbon to . Materials with the largest reversible specific capacity for lithium (about 900 mAh/g) are on this line and were at about 43% carbon, 32% oxygen, and 25% silicon (atomic percent). Materials which were almost pure carbon showed diffraction patterns characteristic of disordered carbons. Along the line from carbon to the sample structure can be described as a mixture of single or small groups of graphene sheets mixed with regions of Si‐C‐O amorphous glass. The amount and composition of the glass changed according to the overall sample composition. Moving from carbon to , the reversible capacity first rises from about 340 mAh/g for pure carbon, to a maximum of 900 mAh/g near 50% carbon, and then falls to near zero mAh/g at 0% carbon. This suggests that the amorphous glass can reversibly react with lithium, provided the carbon is present to provide a path for electrons and Li ions. However, the hysteresis in the voltage profile (difference between charge and discharge voltages) and the irreversible capacity increase almost linearly along this line. There is a clear correlation between both the irreversible capacity and hysteresis in these materials with their oxygen content. Along the line connecting carbon to silicon, the reversible capacity rises from 340 mAh/g for pure carbon to about 600 mAh/g for samples with about 15 atomic percent Si. It then decreases to near zero as the composition nears SiC. Along the C‐SiC line, the irreversible capacities remain below about 200 mAh/g. We are quite convinced that optimized silicon‐containing carbons can be good alternatives to pure carbons as anode materials in lithium‐ion batteries.

Keywords:
Carbon fibers Materials science Lithium (medication) Siloxane Pyrolysis Silicon Anode Amorphous solid Amorphous carbon Polymer Chemical engineering Composite material Chemistry Electrode Organic chemistry Composite number Physical chemistry Metallurgy

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0.96
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Citation History

Topics

Advancements in Battery Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Fiber-reinforced polymer composites
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Silicone and Siloxane Chemistry
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry

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