Abstract
Dry-process fabrication using fibrillatable binder is emerging as a promising method to produce high-loading electrodes for energy storage applications, favored by its cost-efficiency and eco-friendliness. While previous studies have demonstrated the advantages of dry process over the traditional slurry method, there remains a gap in understanding how the particle size of active materials influences the mechanical and electrochemical performance of dry electrodes. In this study, four different particle size NaCrO2 materials (Average size, S-NCO: 0.6 µm, M1-NCO 1.5 µm, M2-NCO: 4.4 µm, and L-NCO: 9.9 µm) are synthesized to investigate the effect of particle size on dry-processed high-loading electrodes. The findings reveal that the larger micron-sized (>4.4 µm) NCO dry films exhibit significantly improved tensile strength and electrochemical performance, primarily ascribed to the low film porosity, abundant inter-particle connection by the binder, comprehensive carbon coverage, and efficient percolation of the conductive pathway. Notably, a full cell incorporated with a high loading (5.2 mAh cm−2) and high active material ratio (96.5 wt.%) L-NCO film electrode demonstrates promising cycling stability and rate capability. These results provide valuable insights regarding the design and fabrication of dry-processed electrodes for future energy storage applications.
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Wu, J., Tang, W., Yang, H., Lee, D. J., Xu, D., Li, F., … Chen, Z. (2025). Micron Size NaCrO2 Particles Enable High-loading Dry-processed Electrode for Sodium Ion Batteries. Small, 21(23). https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202501504
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