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Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries

This work introduces the facile and scalable two‐step synthesis of Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29) (TNO)/carbon hybrid material as a promising anode for lithium‐ion batteries (LIBs). The first step consisted of a mechanically induced self‐sustaining reaction via ball‐milling at room temperature to produce titanium...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Budak, Öznil, Srimuk, Pattarachai, Aslan, Mesut, Shim, Hwirim, Borchardt, Lars, Presser, Volker
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7839535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33124721
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cssc.202002229
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author Budak, Öznil
Srimuk, Pattarachai
Aslan, Mesut
Shim, Hwirim
Borchardt, Lars
Presser, Volker
author_facet Budak, Öznil
Srimuk, Pattarachai
Aslan, Mesut
Shim, Hwirim
Borchardt, Lars
Presser, Volker
author_sort Budak, Öznil
collection PubMed
description This work introduces the facile and scalable two‐step synthesis of Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29) (TNO)/carbon hybrid material as a promising anode for lithium‐ion batteries (LIBs). The first step consisted of a mechanically induced self‐sustaining reaction via ball‐milling at room temperature to produce titanium niobium carbide with a Ti and Nb stoichiometric ratio of 1 to 5. The second step involved the oxidation of as‐synthesized titanium niobium carbide to produce TNO. Synthetic air yielded fully oxidized TNO, while annealing in CO(2) resulted in TNO/carbon hybrids. The electrochemical performance for the hybrid and non‐hybrid electrodes was surveyed in a narrow potential window (1.0–2.5 V vs. Li/Li(+)) and a large potential window (0.05–2.5 V vs. Li/Li(+)). The best hybrid material displayed a specific capacity of 350 mAh g(−1) at a rate of 0.01 A g(−1) (144 mAh g(−1) at 1 A g(−1)) in the large potential window regime. The electrochemical performance of hybrid materials was superior compared to non‐hybrid materials for operation within the large potential window. Due to the advantage of carbon in hybrid material, the rate handling was faster than that of the non‐hybrid one. The hybrid materials displayed robust cycling stability and maintained ca. 70 % of their initial capacities after 500 cycles. In contrast, only ca. 26 % of the initial capacity was maintained after the first 40 cycles for non‐hybrid materials. We also applied our hybrid material as an anode in a full‐cell lithium‐ion battery by coupling it with commercial LiMn(2)O(4).
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spelling pubmed-78395352021-02-01 Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries Budak, Öznil Srimuk, Pattarachai Aslan, Mesut Shim, Hwirim Borchardt, Lars Presser, Volker ChemSusChem Full Papers This work introduces the facile and scalable two‐step synthesis of Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29) (TNO)/carbon hybrid material as a promising anode for lithium‐ion batteries (LIBs). The first step consisted of a mechanically induced self‐sustaining reaction via ball‐milling at room temperature to produce titanium niobium carbide with a Ti and Nb stoichiometric ratio of 1 to 5. The second step involved the oxidation of as‐synthesized titanium niobium carbide to produce TNO. Synthetic air yielded fully oxidized TNO, while annealing in CO(2) resulted in TNO/carbon hybrids. The electrochemical performance for the hybrid and non‐hybrid electrodes was surveyed in a narrow potential window (1.0–2.5 V vs. Li/Li(+)) and a large potential window (0.05–2.5 V vs. Li/Li(+)). The best hybrid material displayed a specific capacity of 350 mAh g(−1) at a rate of 0.01 A g(−1) (144 mAh g(−1) at 1 A g(−1)) in the large potential window regime. The electrochemical performance of hybrid materials was superior compared to non‐hybrid materials for operation within the large potential window. Due to the advantage of carbon in hybrid material, the rate handling was faster than that of the non‐hybrid one. The hybrid materials displayed robust cycling stability and maintained ca. 70 % of their initial capacities after 500 cycles. In contrast, only ca. 26 % of the initial capacity was maintained after the first 40 cycles for non‐hybrid materials. We also applied our hybrid material as an anode in a full‐cell lithium‐ion battery by coupling it with commercial LiMn(2)O(4). John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-11-17 2021-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC7839535/ /pubmed/33124721 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cssc.202002229 Text en © 2020 The Authors. ChemSusChem published by Wiley-VCH GmbH This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Full Papers
Budak, Öznil
Srimuk, Pattarachai
Aslan, Mesut
Shim, Hwirim
Borchardt, Lars
Presser, Volker
Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries
title Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries
title_full Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries
title_fullStr Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries
title_full_unstemmed Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries
title_short Titanium Niobium Oxide Ti(2)Nb(10)O(29)/Carbon Hybrid Electrodes Derived by Mechanochemically Synthesized Carbide for High‐Performance Lithium‐Ion Batteries
title_sort titanium niobium oxide ti(2)nb(10)o(29)/carbon hybrid electrodes derived by mechanochemically synthesized carbide for high‐performance lithium‐ion batteries
topic Full Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7839535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33124721
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cssc.202002229
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