Abstract

Searching for new electrode materials with high capacities and excellent rate performance is crucial for the development of next-generation lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). Silicon carbide (SiC), which is traditionally considered to be electrochemically inert toward lithiation, has recently been demonstrated to be a potential high-performance anode material upon activation by surface graphitization. Despite the great potential, it remains a grand challenge to synthesize SiC nanostructures with precisely controlled morphologies and surface properties, due to the rather high reaction temperatures (>1200 °C) typically required for SiC crystallization. Herein, we designed and synthesized a novel type of SiC nanostructures in which bowl-like, ultrathin SiC nanoshells were encapsulated in hollow graphitic carbon spheres (designated as SiC@HGSs), which exhibited unexpectedly high electrochemical performance when used as LIB anodes. SiC@HGSs retained a stable capacity of 1345 mAh g–1 at a current density of 0.6 A g–...

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