Issue 70, 2015

Nanoporous silicon from low-cost natural clinoptilolite for lithium storage

Abstract

Despite the fact that silicon materials can be synthesized from various sources, deriving them from earth-abundant resources is of strategic significance for industrial processing. Here nanoporous silicon (pSi) was derived from earth-abundant natural clinoptilolite (NCLI) without complicated pretreatment. After surface carbon coating, the pSi–C composite displayed a superior stable capacity of ca. 1257 mA h g−1 and good cycling stability with 87.5% capacity retention on the 200th cycle versus the 3rd one, which benefit from its nanoporous structure, very small primary particle size of ∼10 nm and highly conductive carbon-matrix.

Graphical abstract: Nanoporous silicon from low-cost natural clinoptilolite for lithium storage

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 May 2015
Accepted
22 Jun 2015
First published
22 Jun 2015

RSC Adv., 2015,5, 56772-56779

Nanoporous silicon from low-cost natural clinoptilolite for lithium storage

R. Miao, J. Yang, Y. Wu, J. Wang, Y. Nuli and W. Lu, RSC Adv., 2015, 5, 56772 DOI: 10.1039/C5RA08622A

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