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Lithium metal anode is the ultimate choice to obtain next-generation high-energy-density lithium batteries, while the dendritic lithium growth owing to the unstable lithium anode/electrolyte interface largely limits its practical application. Separator is an important component in batteries and separator engineering is believed to be a tractable and effective way to address the above issue. Separators can play the role of ion redistributors to guide the transport of lithium ions and regulate the uniform electrodeposition of Li. The electrolyte wettability, thermal shrinkage resistance, and mechanical strength are of importance for separators. Here, clay-originated two-dimensional (2D) holey amorphous silica nanosheets (ASN) to develop a low-cost and eco-friendly inorganic separator is directly adopted. The ASN-based separator has higher porosity, better electrolyte wettability, much higher thermal resistance, larger lithium transference number, and ionic conductivity compared with commercial separator. The large amounts of holes and rich surface oxygen groups on the ASN guide the uniform distribution of lithium-ion flux. Consequently, the Li//Li cell with this separator shows stable lithium plating/stripping, and the corresponding Li//LiFePO4 , Li//LiCoO2, and Li//NCM523 full cells also show high capacity, excellent rate performance, and outstanding cycling stability, which is much superior to that using the commercial separator.
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Graphene and its derivatives are emerging as a class of novel but versatile templates for the controlled preparation and functionalization of materials. In this paper a conceptual review on graphene-based templates is given, highlighting their versatile roles in materials preparation. Graphene is capable of acting as a low-dimensional hard template, where its two-dimensional morphology directs the formation of novel nanostructures. Graphene oxide and other functionalized graphenes are amphiphilic and may be seen as soft templates for formatting the growth or inducing the controlled assembly of nanostructures. In addition, nanospaces in restacked graphene can be used for confining the growth of sheet-like nanostructures, and assemblies of interlinked graphenes can behave either as skeletons for the formation of composite materials or as sacrificial templates for novel materials with a controlled network structure. In summary, flexible graphene and its derivatives together with an increasing number of assembled structures show great potentials as templates for materials production. Many challenges remain, for example precise structural control of such novel templates and the removal of the non-functional remaining templates.
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Uneven lithium deposition poses a primary challenge for lithium-ion batteries, as it often triggers the growth of lithium dendrites, thereby significantly compromising battery performance and potentially giving rise to safety concerns. Therefore, the high level of safety must be guaranteed to achieve the large-scale application of battery energy storage systems. Here, we present a novel separator design achieved by incorporating a two-dimensional A-type molecular sieve coating onto the polypropylene separator surface, which functions as an effective lithium ion redistribution layer. The results demonstrated that even after undergoing 1000 cycles, the cell equipped with a two-dimensional A-type molecular sieve-Polypropylene (2D-A-PP) separator still maintains an impressive capacity retention rate of 70 %. In contrast, cells equipped with Polypropylene (PP) separators exhibit capacity retention rates below 50 % after only 500 cycles. Additionally, the incorporation of a two-dimensional molecular sieve enhances the mechanical properties of the PP separator, thereby bolstering battery safety. This study proposes a novel concept for the design of lithium-ion battery separator materials, offering a fresh perspective on the development of separators with exceptional thermal stability, enhanced porosity, superior electrolyte affinity, and effective inhibition of lithium dendrite formation.
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Considering the serious electromagnetic wave (EMW) pollution problems and complex application condition, there is a pressing need to amalgamate multiple functionalities within a single substance. However, the effective integration of diverse functions into designed EMW absorption materials still faces the huge challenges. Herein, reduced graphene oxide/carbon foams (RGO/CFs) with two-dimensional/three-dimensional (2D/3D) van der Waals (vdWs) heterostructures were meticulously engineered and synthesized utilizing an efficient methodology involving freeze-drying, immersing absorption, secondary freeze-drying, followed by carbonization treatment. Thanks to their excellent linkage effect of amplified dielectric loss and optimized impedance matching, the designed 2D/3D RGO/CFs vdWs heterostructures demonstrated commendable EMW absorption performances, achieving a broad absorption bandwidth of 6.2 GHz and a reflection loss of - 50.58 dB with the low matching thicknesses. Furthermore, the obtained 2D/3D RGO/CFs vdWs heterostructures also displayed the significant radar stealth properties, good corrosion resistance performances as well as outstanding thermal insulation capabilities, displaying the great potential in complex and variable environments. Accordingly, this work not only demonstrated a straightforward method for fabricating 2D/3D vdWs heterostructures, but also outlined a powerful mixed-dimensional assembly strategy for engineering multifunctional foams for electromagnetic protection, aerospace and other complex conditions.
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The poor ambient ionic transport properties of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-based SPEs can be greatly improved through filler introduction. Metal fluorides are effective in promoting the dissociation of lithium salts via the establishment of the Li-F bond. However, too strong Li-F interaction would impair the fast migration of lithium ions. Herein, magnesium aluminum fluoride (MAF) fillers are developed. Experimental and simulation results reveal that the Li-F bond strength could be readily altered by changing fluorine vacancy (VF) concentration in the MAF, and lithium salt anions can also be well immobilized, which realizes a balance between the dissociation degree of lithium salts and fast transport of lithium ions. Consequently, the Li symmetric cells cycle stably for more than 1400 h at 0.1 mA cm-2 with a LiF/Li3N-rich solid electrolyte interphase (SEI). The SPE exhibits a high ionic conductivity (0.5 mS cm-1) and large lithium-ion transference number (0.4), as well as high mechanical strength owing to the hydrogen bonding between MAF and PEO. The corresponding Li//LiFePO4 cells deliver a high discharge capacity of 160.1 mAh g-1 at 1 C and excellent cycling stability with 100.2 mAh g-1 retaining after 1000 cycles. The as-assembled pouch cells show excellent electrochemical stability even at rigorous conditions, demonstrating high safety and practicability.
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Hollow carbon spheres or core-sheath porous carbon spheres have been widely used in the S cathode of lithium-sulfur batteries. However, the sphere shells or the pore walls may block the free transport of active species to a certain extent and may have a negative influence on the effective accommodation of elemental sulfur. Herein, solid but porous carbon spheres (PNCS) with large porosity and high specific surface area are developed, which enable high sulfur loading and ample cathode/electrolyte contact area, and the interconnected open pore channels significantly shorten the ion/electron transport pathways. Together with high-conducting nitrogen-doped graphene (NG), facilitated polysulfide conversion kinetics is realized in the as-assembled Li-S batteries, which deliver a high initial discharge capacity of 1445 mAh g-1 at 0.2 C, excellent rate capability of 872 mAh g-1 at 4 C, and low capacity decay of 0.047% per cycle for 500 cycles at 1 C. Even under high sulfur loading of 5.5 mg cm-2 and low electrolyte/sulfur (E/S) ratio of 5 µL mg-1, the Li-S batteries still display high specific capacities of 896 mAh g-1 and 4.96 mAh cm-2. The real application of PNCS/NG is also demonstrated by the corresponding Li-S pouch cells showing high discharging capacity and stable open circuit voltage. This work exhibits the promising application of the solid carbon spheres as the S host for effectively addressing the polysulfide shuttle and propelling the development of high-performance Li-S batteries.
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Polymer electrolytes have gained extensive attention owing to their high flexibility, easy processibility, intrinsic safety, and compatibility with current fabrication technologies. However, their low ionic conductivity and lithium transference number have largely impaired their real application. Herein, novel two-dimensional clay nanosheets with abundant cation vacancies are created and incorporated in a poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)/poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene)-blended polymer-based electrolyte. The characterization and simulation results reveal that the cation vacancies not only provide lithium ions with additional Lewis acid-base interaction sites but also protect the PEO chains from being oxidized by excess lithium ions, which enhances the dissociation of lithium salts and the hopping mechanism of lithium ions. Benefiting from this, the polymer electrolyte shows a high ionic conductivity of 2.6 × 10-3 S cm-1 at 27 °C, a large Li+ transference number up to 0.77, and a wide electrochemical stability window of 4.9 V. Furthermore, the LiFePO4â¥Li coin cell with such a polymer electrolyte delivers a high specific capacity of 145 mA h g-1 with an initial Coulombic efficiency of 99.9% and a capacity retention of 97.3% after 100 cycles at ambient temperature, as well as a superior rate performance. When pairing with high-voltage cathodes LiCoO2 and LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4, the corresponding cells also exhibit favorable electrochemical stability and a high capacity retention. In addition, the LiFePO4â¥Li pouch cells display high safety even under rigorous conditions including corner-cut, bending, and nail-penetration.
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Two-dimensional (2D) nanochannel arrays are constructed by bottom-up reassembly of montmorillonite monolayers that are obtained by liquid-phase exfoliation of its layered crystals, and the as-constructed interstitial space between these monolayers is uniform and provides ions with nanoscale transport channels. Surface-charge-controlled ion transport behavior is observed through these nanochannels as the electrolyte concentration reduces to 10-4 M at room temperature. Furthermore, the nanochannel structure remains even after 400 °C heat treatment, and nanofluidic devices based on the annealed nanochannel arrays still exhibit surface-charge-governed ion transport at low electrolyte concentrations. In addition, a drift-diffusion experiment is conducted to investigate the mobility ratio of cations/anions through the nanochannels with asymmetric bulk electrolyte concentrations, and the results show that the mobility of cations is about eight to nine times that of anions, which is consistent with the fact that the montmorillonite monolayers are negatively charged and the nanochannels are permselective. Last, ionic current rectification is observed in the nanofluidic system of asymmetric geometric shape, and rectification factors of â¼2.6 and â¼3.5 can be obtained in KCl and HCl electrolytes, respectively, at a bias between -1 and +1 V because of the asymmetric electrostatic potential through the nanochannels.
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Exfoliated two-dimensional (2D) sheets can readily stack to form flexible, free-standing films with lamellar microstructure. The interlayer spaces in such lamellar films form a percolated network of molecularly sized, 2D nanochannels that could be used to regulate molecular transport. Here we report self-assembled clay-based 2D nanofluidic channels with surface charge-governed proton conductivity. Proton conductivity of these 2D channels exceeds that of acid solution for concentrations up to 0.1 M, and remains stable as the reservoir concentration is varied by orders of magnitude. Proton transport occurs through a Grotthuss mechanism, with activation energy and mobility of 0.19 eV and 1.2 × 10(-3) cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), respectively. Vermiculite nanochannels exhibit extraordinary thermal stability, maintaining their proton conduction functions even after annealing at 500 °C in air. The ease of constructing massive arrays of stable 2D nanochannels without lithography should prove useful to the study of confined ionic transport, and will enable new ionic device designs.
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Due to its amphiphilic property, graphene oxide (GO) can achieve a variety of nanostructures with different morphologies (for example membranes, hydrogel, crumpled particles, hollow spheres, sack-cargo particles, Pickering emulsions, and so on) by self-assembly. The self-assembly is mostly derived from the self-concentration of GO sheets at various interfaces, including liquid-air, liquid-liquid and liquid-solid interfaces. This paper gives a comprehensive review of these assembly phenomena of GO at the three types of interfaces, the derived interfacial self-assembly techniques, and the as-obtained assembled materials and their properties. The interfacial self-assembly of GO, enabled by its fantastic features including the amphiphilicity, the negatively charged nature, abundant oxygen-containing groups and two-dimensional flexibility, is highlighted as an easy and well-controlled strategy for the design and preparation of functionalized carbon materials, and the use of self-assembly for uniform hybridization is addressed for preparing hybrid carbon materials with various functions. A number of new exciting and potential applications are also presented for the assembled GO-based materials. This contribution concludes with some personal perspectives on future challenges before interfacial self-assembly may become a major strategy for the application-targeted design and preparation of functionalized carbon materials.
Assuntos
Grafite/química , Óxidos/químicaRESUMO
Flattened Sn sheets are prepared from the pre-seeded Sn salt in the interlayer nanospace of a graphene membrane, which acts as a template to shape Sn crystals and prevent the aggregation. The sandwich structure clamping Sn sheets accommodates the volume change during charge/discharge. We show that the hybrid possesses excellent rate performance and cycling stability as an anode for lithium ion batteries.
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The liquid/air interface provides an ideal platform for the uniform hybridization of multi-components in a thin graphene-based membrane through self-assembly. This study presents the first example for such a hybrid membrane which combines chemically active GO layers with highly conductive carbon nanotubes.
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A strong solid/liquid interfacial interaction is found between porous alumina and graphene oxide (GO) aqueous dispersion, which promotes a fast enrichment of GO on the alumina surface and results in the formation of a GO hydrogel.