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Ultra‐Lightweight 3D Carbon Current Collectors: Constructing All‐Carbon Electrodes for Stable and High Energy Density Dual‐Ion Batteries
Authors:Zhili Zhou  Na Li  Yazheng Yang  Haosen Chen  Shuqiang Jiao  Wei‐Li Song  Daining Fang
Institution:1. Institute of Advanced Structure Technology, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, P. R. China;2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Lightweight Multi‐functional Composite Materials and Structures, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, P. R. China;3. School of Materials Science and Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, P. R. China;4. Collaborative Innovation Center of Electric Vehicles in Beijing, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, P. R. China;5. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Metallurgy, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing, P. R. China;6. State Key Laboratory for Turbulence and Complex Systems, College of Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, P. R. China
Abstract:Dual‐ion batteries (DIBs) attract great interest because they allow two types of ions for reversibly intercalating into electrodes, resulting in various advantages. However, there are three critical problems using graphite‐based cathodes, namely, low active material proportion in the electrodes, current collector corrosion, and massive cathode variation. For addressing these problems, an ultra‐lightweight 3D carbon current collector (CCC) is developed to fabricate all‐carbon electrodes as both cathodes and anodes. Compared with the conventional DIBs using Al and Cu foils as current collectors, the DIBs with 3D CCC of electrically conductive pathways and sufficient ionic diffusion channels deliver enhanced specific capacity stabilized around 140 and 120 mAh g?1 at 0.5 and 1C, respectively. The electrochemically inert 3D CCC could essentially promote the energy density when calculating the entire electrode mass, along with long‐life cycle stability of 1000 cycles at 5C and no electrochemical corrosion on either anodes or cathodes. With an in situ optical microscope, the cathode expansion is found to massively reduce because the porous 3D CCC could effectively alleviate the huge volume. The results suggest a novel strategy for achieving low‐cost and high energy density DIBs with both mechanically and electrochemically stable features.
Keywords:carbon current collectors  dual‐ion batteries  graphite cathodes  in situ optical observations  mechanically and electrochemically stable
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