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Sodium carboxymethylcellulose induced engineering a porous carbon and graphene immobilized magnetite composite for lithium-ion storage.

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Immobilizing nanosized electrochemically active materials with supportive carbonaceous framework usually brings in improved lithium-ion storage performance. In this work, magnetite nanoparticles (Fe3O4) are stabilized by both porous carbon domains (PC)… Click to show full abstract

Immobilizing nanosized electrochemically active materials with supportive carbonaceous framework usually brings in improved lithium-ion storage performance. In this work, magnetite nanoparticles (Fe3O4) are stabilized by both porous carbon domains (PC) and reduced graphene oxide sheets (RGO) to form a hierarchical composite (Fe3O4@PC/RGO) via a straightforward approach. The PC confined iron nanoparticle intermediate sample (Fe@PC) was first fabricated, where sodium carboxymethylcellulose (Na-CMC) was employed not only as a cross-linker to trap ferric ions for synthesizing a Fe-CMC precursor sample, but also as the carbon source for PC domains and iron source for Fe nanoparticles in a pyrolysis process. The final redox reaction between Fe@PC and few-layered graphene oxide (GO) sheets contributed to the formation of Fe3O4 nanoparticles with reduced size, avoiding any severe aggregation or excessive exposure. The Fe3O4@PC/RGO sample delivered a specific capacity of 522.2 mAh·g-1 under a current rate of 1000 mA·g-1 for 650 cycles. The engineered Fe@PC and Fe3O4@PC/RGO samples have good prospects for application in wider fields.

Keywords: sodium carboxymethylcellulose; ion storage; porous carbon; lithium ion

Journal Title: Journal of colloid and interface science
Year Published: 2021

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