Electrical energy storage plays an increasingly important role in modern society. Current energy storage methods are highly dependent on lithium-ion energy storage devices, and the expanded use of these technologies is likely to affect existing lithium reserves. The abundance of sodium makes Na-ion-based devices very attractive as an alternative, sustainable energy storage system. However, electrodes based on transition-metal oxides often show slow kinetics and poor cycling stability, limiting their use as Na-ion-based energy storage devices. The present paper details a new direction for electrode architectures for Na-ion storage. Using a simple hydrothermal process, we synthesized interpenetrating porous networks consisting of layer-structured V(2)O(5) nanowires and carbon nanotubes (CNTs). This type of architecture provides facile sodium insertion/extraction and fast electron transfer, enabling the fabrication of high-performance Na-ion pseudocapacitors with an organic electrolyte. Hybrid asymmetric capacitors incorporating the V(2)O(5)/CNT nanowire composites as the anode operated at a maximum voltage of 2.8 V and delivered a maximum energy of ∼40 Wh kg(-1), which is comparable to Li-ion-based asymmetric capacitors. The availability of capacitive storage based on Na-ion systems is an attractive, cost-effective alternative to Li-ion systems.
Design and fabrication of effective electrode structure is essential but is still a challenge for current lithium-ion battery technology. Herein we report the design and fabrication of a class of high-performance robust nanocomposites based on iron oxide spheres and carbon nanotubes (CNTs). An efficient aerosol spray process combined with vacuum filtration was used to synthesize such composite architecture, where oxide nanocrystals were assembled into a continuous carbon skeleton and entangled in porous CNT networks. This material architecture offers many critical features that are required for high-performance anodes, including efficient ion transport, high conductivity, and structure durability, therefore enabling an electrode with outstanding lithium storage performance. For example, such an electrode with a thickness of ∼35 μm could deliver a specific capacity of 994 mA h g(-1) (based on total electrode weight) and high recharging rates. This effective strategy can be extended to construct many other composite electrodes for high-performance lithium-ion batteries.
Highly robust, flexible, binder-free lithium-ion electrodes were fabricated based on interpenetrative nanocomposites of ultra-long CNTs and V 2 O 5 nanowires. Such robust composite-network architecture provides the electrodes with effective charge transport and structural integrity, leading to high-performance flexible electrodes with high capacity, high rate-capability and excellent cycling stability.
Flexible, binder-free LiMn(2)O(4)/CNT nanocomposites with good reversible capability and cycling stability were fabricated by in-situ hydrothermal growth for flexible lithium battery applications.
High-performance energy-storage architectures are fabricated by forming conformal coatings of active nanocrystal building blocks on preformed carbon nanotube conductive scaffolds for lithium ion electrodes. This unique structure offers effective pathways for charge transport, high active-material loading, structure robustness, and flexibility. This general approach enables the fabrication of a new family of high-performance architectures for energy storage and many other applications.
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