Engineering and optimization of silicon-iron-manganese nanoalloy electrode for enhanced lithium-ion battery

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Abstract

The electrochemical performance of a battery is considered to be primarily dependent on the electrode material. However, engineering and optimization of electrodes also play a crucial role, and the same electrode material can be designed to offer significantly improved batteries. In this work, Si-Fe-Mn nanomaterial alloy (Si/alloy) and graphite composite electrodes were densified at different calendering conditions of 3, 5, and 8 tons, and its influence on electrode porosity, electrolyte wettability, and long-term cycling was investigated. The active material loading was maintained very high (~ 2 mg cm-2) to implement electrode engineering close to commercial loading scales. The densification was optimized to balance between the electrode thickness and wettability to enable the best electrochemical properties of the Si/alloy anodes. In this case, engineering and optimizing the Si/alloy composite electrodes to 3 ton calendering (electrode densification from 0.39 to 0.48 g cm-3) showed enhanced cycling stability with a high capacity retention of ~ 100% over 100 cycles.

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Alaboina, P. K., Cho, J. S., & Cho, S. J. (2017). Engineering and optimization of silicon-iron-manganese nanoalloy electrode for enhanced lithium-ion battery. Nano-Micro Letters, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40820-017-0142-8

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