Publication | Closed Access
Controlled thermal sintering of a metal–metal oxide–carbon ternary composite with a multi-scale hollow nanostructure for use as an anode material in Li-ion batteries
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Citations
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References
2014
Year
EngineeringNanoporous MaterialControlled SinteringPorous PolymerChemistryChemical EngineeringNanoscale ChemistryCarbon-based MaterialLi-ion BatteriesMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringBattery Electrode MaterialsNanotechnologyLithium-ion BatteryLithium-ion BatteriesEnergy StorageSynthetic SchemeSolid-state BatteryMulti-scale Hollow NanostructurePorous CarbonLi-ion Battery MaterialsNanomaterialsCathode MaterialsThermal SinteringBatteriesAnode MaterialsPs Nanobeads
We report a synthetic scheme for preparing a SnO2-Sn-carbon triad inverse opal porous material using the controlled sintering of Sn precursor-infiltrated polystyrene (PS) nanobead films. Because the uniform PS nanobead film, which can be converted into carbon via a sintering step, uptakes the precursor solution, the carbon can be uniformly distributed throughout the Sn-based anode material. Moreover, the partial carbonization of the PS nanobeads under a controlled Ar/oxygen environment not only produces a composite material with an inverse opal-like porous nanostructure but also converts the Sn precursor/PS into a SnO2-Sn-C triad electrode.
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