Formation of Nanodimensional NiCoO2 Encapsulated in Porous Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Submicrospheres from a Bimetallic (Ni, Co) Organic Framework toward Efficient Lithium Storage

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2019 Sep 4;11(35):32052-32061. doi: 10.1021/acsami.9b11822. Epub 2019 Aug 22.

Abstract

Recently, rock-salt NiCoO2 (NCO) with desirable electronic conductivity has drawn enormous interest worldwide for energy-related applications. However, the intrinsically sluggish kinetics and electrode aggregation/volumetric change/pulverization during Li-insertion/-extraction processes hugely limit its applications in Li-ion batteries (LIBs). In the contribution, we first devise a bottom-up method for scalable fabrication of the nanodimensional NCO particles encapsulated in porous nitrogen-doped carbon submicrospheres (NCS), which are derived from a bimetal (Ni, Co) metal-organic framework. The porous NCS, as a flexible conductive skeleton, can buffer distinct volume expansion as an efficient buffering phase, restrain agglomeration of nanoscaled NCO, and enhance electronic conductivity and wettability of the electrode. Benefiting from the synergistic functions between the nanodimensional NCO and porous NCS, the obtained NCO@NCS anode (∼74.5 wt % NCO) is endowed with remarkable high-rate reversible capacity (∼403.0 mAh g-1 at 1.0 A g-1) and cycling behaviors (∼371.4 mAh g-1 after being cycled for 1000 times at 1.0 A g-1) along with a high lithium diffusion coefficient and remarkable pseudocapacitive contribution. Furthermore, the NCO@NCS-based full LIBs exhibit competitive lithium-storage properties in terms of energy density (∼217.0 Wh kg-1) and cyclic stability. Furthermore, we believe that the methodology is highly promising in versatile design and construction of binary metal oxide/carbon hybrid anodes for advanced LIBs.

Keywords: Li-ion batteries; N-doped carbon submicrospheres; bimetallic metal-organic framework; hybrid anode; nanoscaled NiCoO.