Surfaces/Interfaces Modification for Vacancies Enhancing Lithium Storage Capability of Cu<sub>2</sub>O Ultrasmall Nanocrystals
Article 2018 en
Authors
HS
Huawei Song
YG
Yue Gong
JS
Jian Su
Abstract
1 min read
Theoretically, Cu<sub>2</sub>O delivers a poor Li storage capacity ∼373.9 mA h g<sup>-1</sup> based on a so-called conversion reaction (Cu<sub>2</sub>O + 2Li → 2Cu + Li<sub>2</sub>O). Herein, we broke through the bottleneck and acquired an impressive lithium storage capability (1122 mA h g<sup>-1</sup>) tripled more than the theoretical one by an in situ surface/interface engineering process for the first time. The surface/interface modification enabled us to fabricate ultrasmall nanocrystals of Cu<sub>2</sub>O with Cu vacancies (V<sub>Cu</sub>) of high concentration, somewhat like monovalent anion doping. Except for the conversion reaction-type capacity, V<sub>Cu</sub> enhancing intercalation pesudocapacitance in Cu<sub>2</sub>O and its reduction product-Cu also contributed a lot to the Li-storage capability. First-principles calculation substantiated that intercalation energy of Li was severely lowered for both Cu vacancy-rich Cu<sub>2</sub>O and Cu comparing with their stoichiometric counterparts. Another important factor for the enhancement was the surface/interface organic species themselves which could reversibly store Li by redox reactions. The surface/interface modification for vacancies, vacancy inheritance from metal oxide to single metal, and vacancy-enhancing Li-storage capability in metal oxide and single metal all will inspire us a lot in fabricating new-generation advanced electrodes for rechargeable batteries.
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