anodes exceeds that of the best-performing multi-component systems with and without conductivity-enhancing additives that are reported to date (Table S3).36-45 We tuned mass-loading of TzG/Si@Cu electrodes that lead to similar excellent performance (Supplementary information Table S2, Section S2.6, Figure S17-S19). For example, we were able to increase the Si mass-loading of the electrode beyond 1 mg cm-2 by a two rounds of polymerisation on top of a TzG/Si@Cu electrode in the presence of small quantities of Cu(OAc)2 as an additional source of Cu(II) species (Supplementary Information Section S1.6, Table S2). The obtained electrodes show a stable cycling performance and comparably high capacities as electrodes obtained in a one-step growth process (Figure S19).
TzG is a thermally stable polymer with a decomposition onset above 400 °C under air.10 Hence, we tested the performance of the TzG/Si@Cu half-cell after a heat treatment of 80 °C for 6 h, above temperatures experienced by Li-ion batteries in some industrial and military settings. The overall performance of the TzG/Si@Cu half-cell after the thermal-stress test remains at ~3000 mA h g-1 in the second cycle comparable to the performance of untreated electrodes. The difference in overall capacity and in capacity retention can be attributed to partial decomposition of LiPF6 during the extended heat treatment (Figure S20). As a proof of concept, we assembled a full cell using TzG/Si@Cu as the anode and the commercially available standard NCM811 as the cathode (Figure S21 and S22). The NCM811 cathode was selected over three commercial options (NCM532, NCM622, and NCA) as the one with the highest specific capacity and most stable cycling performance. We believe that full-cell assemblies with better coulombic efficiencies can be achieved using cathodes that (i) match the high capacity of our anode better, and (ii) have similar diffusion kinetics.
Conclusion
We present here a one-pot synthetic protocol that yields high-performance silicon anodes within one hour of reaction time. These anodes consist of silicon nanoparticles that are fully encapsulated by a semi-conducting, porous triazine-based graphdiyne (TzG) polymer that grows directly on the Cu current collector. Cu foil plays three roles in this paradigm-changing method of anode fabrication: it acts (i) as a source of Cu species for a Glaser‐type oxidative coupling polymerization, (ii) as templating substrate for the polymer film, and (iii) as the current collector of the electrode. The porous , semi-conducting TzG polymer acts (i) as a strong, flexible binder that envelops Si NPs with a matrix of covalent bonds that can sustain the dramatic volume changes of silicon in repeated de-/lithiation cycles and prevents detrimental abrasion and reformation of the solid electrolyte interface, (ii) as a facilitator of charge transport along its π-conjugated polymer backbone, and (iii) as a medium for mass transport of lithium ions and electrolyte through its microporous channels. The resulting anodes achieve stable electrochemical cycling performance and an extraordinarily high capacity close to the theoretical limit of electrochemical storage using silicon. The reported process uses raw materials and methods common in industrial electrode manufacture and can be transferred and scaled up with ease. Half-cell electrode assemblies in the off-state retain key performance parameters even after thermal stress, and full-cell cycling tests using commercial cathodes demonstrate the viability of this technology in commercial applications.
Acknowledgements
We thank Dr. Martin Dračínský for solid-state NMR measurements, Dr. Petr Formánek for TEM imaging and mapping, Prof. Dr. Jürgen P. Rabe for access to Raman spectroscopy. J.H. thanks Dr. Mathias Trunk for providing monomer materials, Weimiao Wang for Raman spectra discussion and analysis. M.J.B. thanks the European Research Council (ERC) for funding under the Starting Grant Scheme (BEGMAT-678462) and the Proof of Concept Grant Scheme (LiAnMat-957534).
Keywords: graphdiyne • glaser-coupling • Li-ion battery • silicon anode • one-pot
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