Abstract

Antimony-based alloys have appealed to an ever-increasing interest for potassium ion storage due to their high theoretical capacity and safe voltage. However, sluggish kinetics and the large radius of K+ lead to limited rate performance and severe capacity fading. In this Letter, highly dispersed antimony-bismuth alloy nanoparticles confined in carbon fibers are fabricated through an electrospinning technology followed by heat treatment. The BiSb nanoparticles are uniformly confined into the carbon fibers, which facilitate rapid electron transport and inhibit the volume change during cycling owing to the synergistic effect of the BiSb alloy and carbon confinement engineering. Furthermore, the effect of a potassium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide (KFSI) electrolyte with different concentrations has been investigated. Theoretical calculation demonstrates that the incorporation of Bi metal is favorable for potassium adsorption. The combination of delicate nanofiber morphology and electrolyte chemistry endows the fiber composite with an improved reversible capacity of 274.4 mAh g-1, promising rate capability, and cycling stability upon 500 cycles.

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