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The global warming fact has been calling for a change in our current energy infrastructure, which is based on fossil fuels. Lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) are one of our main tools that can serve our society for the desired transition from non-renewable energy sources to renewable ones, for instance, by opening the door of e-mobility with their high energy efficiency. However, the current state-of-art revealed that the electrode architecture has a crucial role in the obtained electrochemical performance of LIBs. In the traditional composite electrodes based on a physical admixture of components, particle-to-particle contact loss occurs between the electrochemically active metal oxide and conductive carbon additive, eventuate in poor electrochemical performance. On the other hand, hybrid electrode architecture provides nanoscopic chemical blending between the metal oxide and carbon, resulting in advanced electrochemical performance due to a continuous conductive network. However, the synthesis techniques for hybrid materials are limited to wet chemical synthesis. Therefore, the aim of this doctoral work is to explore novel synthesis approaches for the metal oxide/carbon hybrid materials and investigate their performances for LIBs with the comparison of their composite counterparts. For that purpose, this dissertation investigates the promising anode candidates for LIBs, namely, V2O3, Nb2O5, and Ti2Nb10O29, which were synthesized from their relatively cheap carbide sources via a new synthesis approach, chloroxidation or simple CO2 oxidation. The successfully-synthesized carbide-derived metal oxide/carbon hybrids displayed advanced rate handling abilities and cyclic stabilities compared to their counterparts.
This study demonstrates the hybridization of Li4Ti5O12 (LTO) with different types of carbon onions synthesized from nanodiamonds. The carbon onions mixed with a Li4Ti5Ox precursor for sol–gel synthesis. These hybrid materials are tested as anodes for both lithium-ion battery (LIB) and sodium-ion battery (SIB). Electrochemical characterization for LIB application is carried out using 1 m LiPF6 in a 1:1 (by volume) ethylene carbonate and dimethyl carbonate as the electrolyte. For lithium-ion intercalation, LTO hybridized with carbon onions from the inert-gas route achieves an excellent electrochemical performance of 188 mAh g−1 at 10 mA g−1, which maintains 100 mAh g−1 at 1 A g−1 and has a cycling stability of 96% of initial capacity after 400 cycles, thereby outperforming both neat LTO and LTO with onions obtained via vacuum treatment. The performance of the best-performing hybrid material (LTO with carbon onions from argon annealing) in an SIB is tested, using 1 m NaClO4 in ethylene/dimethyl/fluoroethylene carbonate (19:19:2 by mass) as the electrolyte. A maximum capacity of 102 mAh g−1 for the SIB system is obtained, with a capacity retention of 96% after 500 cycles.
This work introduces the facile and scalable two-step synthesis of Ti 2 Nb 10 O 29 (TNO)/carbon hybrid material as a promising anode for lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). The first step uses a mechanically-induced self-sustaining reaction via ball-milling at room temperature to produce titanium niobium carbide with a stoichiometric ratio of Ti and Nb of 1 to 5. The second step involves the oxidation of as-synthesized titanium niobium carbide to produce TNO. Synthetic air yields fully oxidized TNO, while annealing in CO 2 results in TNO/carbon hybrids. The electrochemical performance for the hybrid and non-hybrid electrodes was surveyed for a narrow potential window (1.0-2.5 V vs. Li/Li + ) and a large potential window (0.05-2.5 V vs. Li/Li + ). The best hybrid material displayed a specific capacity of 350 mAh/g at a rate of 0.01 A/g (144 mAh/g at 1 A/g) in the large potential window regime. The electrochemical performance of hybrid materials is superior compared to non-hybrid materials for operation within the large potential window. Due to the advantage of carbon in hybrid material, the rate handling is faster than that of the non-hybrid one. The hybrid materials display robust cycling stability and maintain ca. 70% of their initial capacities after 500 cycles. In contrast, only ca. 26% of the initial capacity is maintained after the first 40 cycles for non-hybrid materials. We also applied our hybrid material as an anode in a full-cell lithium-ion battery by coupling it with commercial LiMn 2 O 4 .
Electrochemical processes enable a new generation of energy-efficient desalination technologies. While ion electrosorption via capacitive deionization is only suitable for brackish water with low molar strength, the use of Faradaic materials capable of reversible ion intercalation or conversion reactions allows energy-efficient removal of ions from seawater. However, the limited charge transfer/storage capacity of Faradaic materials indicates an upper limit for their desalination applications. Therefore, a new electrochemical concept must be explored to exceed the current state-of-the-art results and to push the desalination capacity beyond 100–200 mgNaCl/gelectrode. In this proof-of-concept work, we introduce the new concept of using metal–air battery technology for desalination. We do so by presenting performance data for zinc–air desalination (ZAD) in 600 mM NaCl. The ZAD cell provides a desalination capacity of 0.9–1.0 mgNaCl/cm2 (normalized to the membrane area; corresponding to 1300 mgNaCl/gZn) with a charge efficiency of 70% when charging/discharging the cell at 1 mA/cm2. The energy consumption of ZAD is 68–92 kJ/mol.
Nb2O5 has been explored as a promising anode material for use as lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), but depending on the crystal structure, the specific capacity was always reported to be usually around or below 200 mAh/g. For the first time, we present coarse-grained Nb2O5 materials that significantly overcome this capacity limitation with the promise of enabling high power applications. Our work introduces coarse-grained carbide-derived Nb2O5 phases obtained either by a one-step or a two-step bulk conversion process. By in situ production of chlorine gas from metal chloride salt at ambient pressure, we obtain in just one step directly orthorhombic Nb2O5 alongside carbide-derived carbon (o-Nb2O5/CDC). In situ formation of chlorine gas from metal chloride salt under vacuum conditions yields CDC covering the remaining carbide core, which can be transformed into metal oxides covered by a carbon shell upon thermal treatment in CO2 gas. The two-step process yielded a mixed-phase tetragonal and monoclinic Nb2O5 with CDC (m-Nb2O5/CDC). Our combined diffraction and spectroscopic data confirm that carbide-derived Nb2O5 materials show disordering of the crystallographic planes caused by oxygen deficiency in the structural units and, in the case of m-Nb2O5/CDC, severe stacking faults. This defect engineering allows access to a very high specific capacity exceeding the two-electron transfer process of conventional Nb2O5. The charge storage capacities of the resulting m-Nb2O5/CDC and o-Nb2O5/CDC are, in both cases, around 300 mAh/g at a specific current of 10 mA/g, thereby, the values are significantly higher than that of the state-of-the-art for Nb2O5 as a LIB anode. Carbide-derived Nb2O5 materials also show robust cycling stability over 500 cycles with capacity fading only 24% for the sample m-Nb2O5/CDC and 28% for o-Nb2O5/CDC, suggesting low degree of expansion/compaction during lithiation and delithiation.