Nitrogen-Doped Hollow Carbon Nanospheres for High-Performance Li-Ion Batteries

Abstract

N-doped carbon materials is of particular attraction for anodes of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) because of their high surface areas, superior electrical conductivity, and excellent mechanical strength, which can store energy by adsorption/desorption of Li<sup>+</sup> at the interfaces between the electrolyte and electrode. By directly carbonization of zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 nanospheres synthesized by an emulsion-based interfacial reaction, we obtained N-doped hollow carbon nanospheres with tunable shell thickness (20 nm to solid sphere) and different N dopant concentrations (3.9 to 21.7 at %). The optimized anode material possessed a shell thickness of 20 nm and contained 16.6 at % N dopants that were predominately pyridinic and pyrrolic. The anode delivered a specific capacity of 2053 mA h g<sup>–1</sup> at 100 mA g<sup>–1</sup> and 879 mA h g<sup>–1</sup> at 5 A g<sup>–1</sup> for 1000 cycles, implying a superior cycling stability. The improved electrochemical performance can be ascribed to (1) the Li<sup>+</sup> adsorption dominated energy storage mechanism prevents the volume change of the electrode materials, (2) the hollow nanostructure assembled by the nanometer-sized primary particles prevents the agglomeration of the nanoparticles and favors for Li<sup>+</sup> diffusion, (3) the optimized N dopant concentration and configuration facilitate the adsorption of Li<sup>+</sup>; and (4) the graphitic carbon nanostructure ensures a good electrical conductivity

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