Here we report the fabrication of a carbon-nanotube (CNT) based lithium ion electrode architecture, consisting of alternating layers of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWNT) and lithium ion active material, to significantly increase the aerial power and energy density of lithium ion battery cathodes. The CNT-based architecture aims to address engineering limitations of nanoscale active materials such as poor packing density, electrolyte reactivity, and costly fabrication. The alternating layers create a highly porous and highly conductive scaffolding to enhance ionic and electronic transport pathways within the electrode. The results show that the presented CNT-based architecture yielded excellent rate capability and highly stable cycling of lithium manganese oxide (LiMn2O4) active materials and lithium (Li) rich layered (xLi2MnO3·(1-x)LiMO2) materials. For LiMn2O4 materials, the CNT-based architecture demonstrates 14–20x higher aerial capacity over standard fabrication electrodes at discharge rates of 10C. For Li-rich layered materials, the CNT-based architecture demonstrates 70% higher aerial capacity over standard fabrication electrodes at discharge rates of C/2. Highly stable cycling for 100 cycles at 15C for LiMn2O4 and 500 cycles at 1C for Li-rich layered materials is also observed using the CNT-based architecture. The effect of the number of layers, layer thickness, and composition of the active material is investigated.
CITATION STYLE
Shah, A., Ates, M. N., Kotz, S., Seo, J., Abraham, K. M., Somu, S., & Busnaina, A. (2014). A Layered Carbon Nanotube Architecture for High Power Lithium Ion Batteries. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 161(6), A989–A995. https://doi.org/10.1149/2.052406jes
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.