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      Highly elastic binders integrating polyrotaxanes for silicon microparticle anodes in lithium ion batteries.

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          Abstract

          Lithium-ion batteries with ever-increasing energy densities are needed for batteries for advanced devices and all-electric vehicles. Silicon has been highlighted as a promising anode material because of its superior specific capacity. During repeated charge-discharge cycles, silicon undergoes huge volume changes. This limits cycle life via particle pulverization and an unstable electrode-electrolyte interface, especially when the particle sizes are in the micrometer range. We show that the incorporation of 5 weight % polyrotaxane to conventional polyacrylic acid binder imparts extraordinary elasticity to the polymer network originating from the ring sliding motion of polyrotaxane. This binder combination keeps even pulverized silicon particles coalesced without disintegration, enabling stable cycle life for silicon microparticle anodes at commercial-level areal capacities.

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          The operated Markov´s chains in economy (discrete chains of Markov with the income)

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            Nano- and bulk-silicon-based insertion anodes for lithium-ion secondary cells

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              A major constituent of brown algae for use in high-capacity Li-ion batteries.

              The identification of similarities in the material requirements for applications of interest and those of living organisms provides opportunities to use renewable natural resources to develop better materials and design better devices. In our work, we harness this strategy to build high-capacity silicon (Si) nanopowder-based lithium (Li)-ion batteries with improved performance characteristics. Si offers more than one order of magnitude higher capacity than graphite, but it exhibits dramatic volume changes during electrochemical alloying and de-alloying with Li, which typically leads to rapid anode degradation. We show that mixing Si nanopowder with alginate, a natural polysaccharide extracted from brown algae, yields a stable battery anode possessing reversible capacity eight times higher than that of the state-of-the-art graphitic anodes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Science
                Science (New York, N.Y.)
                American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
                1095-9203
                0036-8075
                July 21 2017
                : 357
                : 6348
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Graduate School of Energy, Environment, Water, and Sustainability (EEWS) and KAIST Institute (KI) NanoCentury, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon 34141, Republic of Korea.
                [2 ] Graduate School of Energy, Environment, Water, and Sustainability (EEWS) and KAIST Institute (KI) NanoCentury, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon 34141, Republic of Korea. coskun@kaist.ac.kr jangwookchoi@kaist.ac.kr.
                Article
                357/6348/279
                10.1126/science.aal4373
                28729506
                b89b09fa-013c-4a5a-8d77-f53a987f36d5
                History

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