화학공학소재연구정보센터
Chemical Engineering Journal, Vol.258, 357-366, 2014
Continuous synthesis of Li4Ti5O12 nanoparticles in supercritical fluids and their electrochemical performance for anode in Li-ion batteries
A continuous supercritical fluid process is adopted for the synthesis of lithium titanium oxide (Li4Ti5O12, LTO) nanoparticles for applications in lithium ion batteries. The effect of various synthetic conditions, including concentration, residence time, precursor ratios, and supercritical fluids on the phase purity and particle properties are examined. The as-synthesized samples in supercritical water (scH(2)O) or in supercritical methanol (scMeOH) exhibit nanoparticles with sizes of 4-10 nm, but retain an amount of Li of 6.8-8.6 mol.% less than that of the stoichiometric Li content in LTO. The deficient amount of Li is added and calcined in an air or H-2/Ar flow at 600 degrees C. The calcined LTO exhibits phase-pure LTO with high crystallinity. The air-calcined LTO synthesized in scH(2)O exhibits an initial discharge capacity of 174.2 mAh g(-1) at 0.1 degrees C, good rate performance of up to 4 degrees C (133.4 mAh g(-1)), and excellent long-term cyclability for up to 200 cycles. The H-2/Ar-calcined LTO synthesized in scMeOH exhibits an ultrathin and uniform carbon layer on the nanosized LTO with a thickness of 0.5-1 nm. It thus shows much better high-rate performance for charge-discharge rates of above 8 C compared to the air-calcined LTO synthesized in scH(2)O. Crown Copyright (C) 2014 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.