Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active Materials

Among the many studied Li-ion active materials, silicon presents the highest specific capacity, however it suffers from a great volume change during lithiation. In this work, we present two methods for the chemical modification of silicon nanoparticles. Both methods change the materials’ electrochem...

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Main Authors: Maciej Ratynski, Bartosz Hamankiewicz, Dominika A. Buchberger, Andrzej Czerwinski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Molecules
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/25/18/4093
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spelling doaj-2aab87e82f4841a59dc2fe4dd40b3a802020-11-25T03:44:07ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492020-09-01254093409310.3390/molecules25184093Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active MaterialsMaciej Ratynski0Bartosz Hamankiewicz1Dominika A. Buchberger2Andrzej Czerwinski3Faculty of Chemistry, University of Warsaw, Pasteura 1, 02-093 Warsaw, PolandFaculty of Chemistry, University of Warsaw, Pasteura 1, 02-093 Warsaw, PolandFaculty of Chemistry, University of Warsaw, Pasteura 1, 02-093 Warsaw, PolandFaculty of Chemistry, University of Warsaw, Pasteura 1, 02-093 Warsaw, PolandAmong the many studied Li-ion active materials, silicon presents the highest specific capacity, however it suffers from a great volume change during lithiation. In this work, we present two methods for the chemical modification of silicon nanoparticles. Both methods change the materials’ electrochemical characteristics. The combined XPS and SEM results show that the properties of the generated silicon oxide layer depend on the modification procedure employed. Electrochemical characterization reveals that the formed oxide layers show different susceptibility to electro‑reduction during the first lithiation. The single step oxidation procedure resulted in a thin and very stable oxide that acts as an artificial SEI layer during electrode operation. The removal of the native oxide prior to further reactions resulted in a very thick oxide layer formation. The created oxide layers (both thin and thick) greatly suppress the effect of silicon volume changes, which significantly reduces electrode degradation during cycling. Both modification techniques are relatively straightforward and scalable to an industrial level. The proposed modified materials reveal great applicability prospects in next generation Li-ion batteries due to their high specific capacity and remarkable cycling stability.https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/25/18/4093Li-ionsiliconoxidationsilicon oxidecycle life
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maciej Ratynski
Bartosz Hamankiewicz
Dominika A. Buchberger
Andrzej Czerwinski
spellingShingle Maciej Ratynski
Bartosz Hamankiewicz
Dominika A. Buchberger
Andrzej Czerwinski
Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active Materials
Molecules
Li-ion
silicon
oxidation
silicon oxide
cycle life
author_facet Maciej Ratynski
Bartosz Hamankiewicz
Dominika A. Buchberger
Andrzej Czerwinski
author_sort Maciej Ratynski
title Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active Materials
title_short Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active Materials
title_full Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active Materials
title_fullStr Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active Materials
title_full_unstemmed Surface Oxidation of Nano-Silicon as a Method for Cycle Life Enhancement of Li-ion Active Materials
title_sort surface oxidation of nano-silicon as a method for cycle life enhancement of li-ion active materials
publisher MDPI AG
series Molecules
issn 1420-3049
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Among the many studied Li-ion active materials, silicon presents the highest specific capacity, however it suffers from a great volume change during lithiation. In this work, we present two methods for the chemical modification of silicon nanoparticles. Both methods change the materials’ electrochemical characteristics. The combined XPS and SEM results show that the properties of the generated silicon oxide layer depend on the modification procedure employed. Electrochemical characterization reveals that the formed oxide layers show different susceptibility to electro‑reduction during the first lithiation. The single step oxidation procedure resulted in a thin and very stable oxide that acts as an artificial SEI layer during electrode operation. The removal of the native oxide prior to further reactions resulted in a very thick oxide layer formation. The created oxide layers (both thin and thick) greatly suppress the effect of silicon volume changes, which significantly reduces electrode degradation during cycling. Both modification techniques are relatively straightforward and scalable to an industrial level. The proposed modified materials reveal great applicability prospects in next generation Li-ion batteries due to their high specific capacity and remarkable cycling stability.
topic Li-ion
silicon
oxidation
silicon oxide
cycle life
url https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/25/18/4093
work_keys_str_mv AT maciejratynski surfaceoxidationofnanosiliconasamethodforcyclelifeenhancementofliionactivematerials
AT bartoszhamankiewicz surfaceoxidationofnanosiliconasamethodforcyclelifeenhancementofliionactivematerials
AT dominikaabuchberger surfaceoxidationofnanosiliconasamethodforcyclelifeenhancementofliionactivematerials
AT andrzejczerwinski surfaceoxidationofnanosiliconasamethodforcyclelifeenhancementofliionactivematerials
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