Additive-Free Hollow-Structured Co3O4 Nanoparticle Li-Ion Battery: The Origins of Irreversible Capacity Loss
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2014 papers
Abstract
Origins of the irreversible capacity loss were addressed through probing changes in the electronic and structural properties of hollow-structured Co3O4 nanoparticles (NPs) during lithiation and delithiation using electrochemical Co3O4 transistor devices that function as a Co3O4 Li-ion battery. Additive-free Co3O4 NPs were assembled into a Li-ion battery, allowing us to isolate and explore the effects of the Co and Li2O formation/decomposition conversion reactions on the electrical and structural degradation within Co3O4 NP films. NP films ranging between a single monolayer and multilayered film hundreds of nanometers thick prepared with blade-coating and electrophoretic deposition methods, respectively, were embedded in the transistor devices for in situ conduction measurements as a function of battery cycles. During battery operation, the electronic and structural properties of Co3O4 NP films in the bulk, Co3O4/electrolyte, and Co3O4/current collector interfaces were spatially mapped to address the origin of the initial irreversible capacity loss from the first lithiation process. Further, change in carrier injection/extraction between the current collector and the Co3O4 NPs was explored using a modified electrochemical transistor device with multiple voltage probes along the electrical channel.
Related Papers
- → Monolayer Behavior of Cyclic and Linear Forms of Surfactins: Thermodynamic Analysis of Langmuir Monolayers and AFM Study of Langmuir-Blodgett Monolayers(2014)13 cited
- → Stabilization of Langmuir monolayer of hydrophobic thiocholesterol molecules(2008)8 cited
- → Direct observation of defect-diminished fatty acid monolayers and their optical applications(1996)12 cited
- → On The Properties Of Surfactant Monolayers At Low Surface Tensions(2009)
- Metal-incorporated Langmuir Monolayers and Langmuir-Blodgett Films(2004)