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Download fileRed Phosphorus Nanodots on Reduced Graphene Oxide as a Flexible and Ultra-Fast Anode for Sodium-Ion Batteries
journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-22, 00:00 authored by Yihang Liu, Anyi Zhang, Chenfei Shen, Qingzhou Liu, Xuan Cao, Yuqiang Ma, Liang Chen, Christian Lau, Tian-Chi Chen, Fei Wei, Chongwu ZhouSodium-ion batteries
offer an attractive option for potential low
cost and large scale energy storage due to the earth abundance of
sodium. Red phosphorus is considered as a high capacity anode for
sodium-ion batteries with a theoretical capacity of 2596 mAh/g. However,
similar to silicon in lithium-ion batteries, several limitations,
such as large volume expansion upon sodiation/desodiation and low
electronic conductance, have severely limited the performance of red
phosphorus anodes. In order to address the above challenges, we have
developed a method to deposit red phosphorus nanodots densely and
uniformly onto reduced graphene oxide sheets (P@RGO) to minimize the
sodium ion diffusion length and the sodiation/desodiation stresses,
and the RGO network also serves as electron pathway and creates free
space to accommodate the volume variation of phosphorus particles.
The resulted P@RGO flexible anode achieved 1165.4, 510.6, and 135.3
mAh/g specific charge capacity at 159.4, 31878.9, and 47818.3 mA/g
charge/discharge current density in rate capability test, and a 914
mAh/g capacity after 300 deep cycles in cycling stability test at
1593.9 mA/g current density, which marks a significant performance
improvement for red phosphorus anodes for sodium-ion chemistry and
flexible power sources for wearable electronics.