Effects of graphene and carbon coating modifications on electrochemical performance of silicon nanoparticle/graphene composite anode

By de Guzman, Rhet C.; Yang, Jinho; Cheng, Mark Ming-Cheng; Salley, Steven O. & Ng, K.Y. Simon
Published in Journal of Power Sources NULL 2014

Abstract

The effects of graphene and C coating modifications on electrochemical performance of silicon nanoparticle (SiNP)/graphene composite anode were investigated. Graphene with varying sheet sizes (238, 160 and 113 nm) were used as an anode material where a cycling performance dependence on the sheet size (edge sites and sheet disorder) was observed. Temperature-dependent N doping of graphene resulted in graphene with N (5.97% w/w) presenting three binding configurations: 72.1% pyridinic N, 22.4% pyrrolic N and 5.5% graphitic N. The nitrided graphene displayed improved cycling capacity and minimized performance decay, principally due to the pyridinic N. Galvanostatic cycling using increasing current density rates (500–2500 mA g-1) of SiNP composites with C coating/deposition showed improvements in both capacity retention and rate performance. A polyacrylonitrile (PAN)-based coating scheme was used to produce a N-containing (2.20%) C coating which displayed the best high performance improvements, attributable to the minimization of direct solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation and improvement in the conduction path. Optimization of the methods to achieve the best modification characteristics might enable performance improvements that maximize the capabilities of the materials.

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