posted on 2015-12-02, 00:00authored byLei-Lei Tian, Ming-Jian Zhang, Chao Wu, Yi Wei, Jia-Xin Zheng, Ling-Piao Lin, Jun Lu, Khalil Amine, Quan-Chao Zhuang, Feng Pan
Maghemite (γ-Fe2O3) nanocrystalline microspheres (MNMs) self-assembled
with 52 nm nanocrystals bridged with FeOOH around grain boundaries
were formed by solvothermal reaction and thermal oxidation. The unique
architecture endows the MNMs with the lithium storage behavior of
a hybrid battery-supercapacitor electrode: initial charge capacity
of 1060 mAh g–1 at the 100 mA g–1 rate, stable cyclic capacity of 1077.9 mAh g–1 at the same rate after 140 cycles, and rate capability of 538.8
mAh g–1 at 2400 mA g–1. This outstanding
performance was attributed to the nanocrystal superiority, which shortens
the Li+ diffusion paths. The mechanism of this hybrid anode
material was investigated with experimental measurements and structural
analysis. The results indicate that at the first discharge, the MNM
nanocrystal microsphere, whose structure can buffer the volume change
that occurs during lithiation/delithiation, goes through four stages:
Li+ insertion in cation vacancies, spinel-to-rocksalt transformation,
Li+ intercalation of Li1.75+xFe2O3 nanocrystals, and interfacial Li storage
around nanocrystal boundaries. Only the latter two stages were reversible
at and after the second charging/discharging cycle, exhibiting the
hybrid behavior of a battery-supercapacitor with superior lithium
storage.