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Bismuth Nanoparticle@Carbon Composite Anodes for Ultralong Cycle Life and High‐Rate Sodium‐Ion Batteries

277

Citations

41

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Bismuth has emerged as a promising anode material for sodium-ion batteries (SIBs), owing to its high capacity and suitable operating potential. However, large volume changes during alloying/dealloying processes lead to poor cycling performance. Herein, bismuth nanoparticle@carbon (Bi@C) composite is prepared via a facile annealing method using a commercial coordination compound precursor of bismuth citrate. The composite has a uniform structure with Bi nanoparticles embedded within a carbon framework. The nanosized structure ensures a fast kinetics and efficient alleviation of stress/strain caused by the volume change, and the resilient and conductive carbon matrix provides an interconnected electron transportation pathway. The Bi@C composite delivers outstanding sodium-storage performance with an ultralong cycle life of 30 000 cycles at a high current density of 8 A g<sup>-1</sup> and an excellent rate capability of 71% capacity retention at an ultrahigh current rate of 60 A g<sup>-1</sup> . Even at a high mass loading of 11.5 mg cm<sup>-2</sup> , a stable reversible capacity of 280 mA h g<sup>-1</sup> can be obtained after 200 cycles. More importantly, full SIBs by pairing with a Na<sub>3</sub> V<sub>2</sub> (PO<sub>4</sub> )<sub>3</sub> cathode demonstrates superior performance. Combining the facile synthesis and the commercial precursor, the exceptional performance makes the Bi@C composite very promising for practical large-scale applications.

References

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