4.8 Article

Enhanced Diffusion Kinetics of Li Ions in Double-Shell Hollow Carbon Fibers

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 21, Pages 24604-24614

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c01222

Keywords

double shell; hollow structure; carbon fibers; Li+ storage; diffusion kinetics

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51872210, 51672194]
  2. Program for Innovative Teams of Outstanding Young and Middle-aged Researchers in the Higher Education Institutions of Hubei Province [T201602]
  3. Scientific Research Project of Education Department of Hubei Province [D20201103]
  4. Key Program of Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province, China [2017CFA004]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper investigates the application of double-shell hollow carbon fibers in lithium ion storage, which exhibits superior electrochemical performance and maintains high reversible capacity even after a large number of cycles. The unique structural advantages of DSHCFs facilitate the transport kinetics of lithium ions and electrons.
The rational design and preparation of hierarchical hollow structures have promising potential in electrochemical energy storage systems. In this paper, double-shell hollow carbon fibers (DSHCFs) with tunable thickness and shell spacing are prepared using hollow electrospun polystyrene fibers as the hard template and in situ coated polypyrrole as the carbon source. The as-prepared DSHCFs with an optimized structure exhibit a submicrometer shell spacing and a nanoscaled shell thickness, which guarantees sufficient contact area with the electrolyte and provides abundant electrochemical active sites for Li+ storage. Owing to the unique structural advantages, a DSHCF-based anode shows favorable transport kinetics for both Li+ ions and electrons during the lithiation/delithiation process, and a high reversible capacity of 348 mAh g(-1) at 5.0 A g(-1) is well maintained even after 500 cycles with no obvious capacity attenuation. Particular emphasis is given to kinetic Li+ storage mechanisms in DSHCFs that are discussed in detail, providing a new avenue for developing high-performance carbon materials for the practical application of energy storage devices.

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