LANXI ZHIDE NEW ENERGY MATERIALS CO LTD [CN] / CN 121964594 A
Quasi-spherical silicon-carbon composite particles were developed,
distinguished by planar silicon-carbon faces joined to adjacent transitional
arc surfaces — a geometry intermediate between fully spherical particles
(point contact only) and angular bulk particles (sharp edges). To quantify
this morphology, the patent defines a polyhedron degree Q (0–1; values nearer
1 are more ideally polyhedral). The composite is produced by silane
(SiH4) chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of silicon onto
porous carbon derived from phenolic resin.
Monodisperse B-stage phenolic resin microspheres (D50 ≈ 11 μm)
were hot-pressed (200°C, 20 MPa) and deagglomerated, the mutual compression
creating planar faces bridged by transitional arc surfaces. Carbonization
(900°C, 2 h, N2) and water activation (800°C, 4 h) yielded porous
carbon retaining this faceted morphology. Silicon was then deposited by CVD
under 20.0 vol% SiH4 in N2 at 500°C for 8 h
(heated at 2°C/min), followed by a carbon coating from 10.0 vol% acetylene
(C2H2) in N2 at 600°C for 1 h.
The polyhedron degree Q is computed per particle from the planar-face area
fraction k, the number of planar faces N, and the relative standard deviation
S of face areas, approaching 1 as k ≈ 0.9, N ≈ 12, and S → 0. The material
exhibits a polyhedron degree Q of 0.97, a silicon content of 52.3 mass%, and
a BET (Brunauer–Emmett–Teller) specific surface area of 1.5 m2/g.
In half-cells, the material exhibits a delithiation capacity of
1,804.3 mAh/g, a first-cycle efficiency of 84.70% (0.8 V
cutoff), and a 1C/0.1C rate capability of 85.8%, and in
LiCoO2 full cells a capacity retention of 99% after
100 cycles (1 C, 25°C). At comparable silicon content (≈52–53 mass%) and
capacity, a quasi-spherical comparative (Q ≈ 0.35, point contact only)
exhibits a rate capability of 34.2% and a retention of 98.3%, and an angular
polyhedral comparative with planar faces but no arc surfaces (Q ≈ 0.94,
k = 1) exhibits 65.6% and 94.5%.
Figure: SEM (scanning electron microscopy) image of the quasi-spherical
silicon-carbon composite (Example 1), showing micron-scale particles with
broad planar faces meeting at rounded transitional arc surfaces rather than
sharp edges (scale bar: 5 μm).
Takeaway: Combining planar faces with adjacent transitional
arc surfaces gives quasi-spherical particles the packing density and large
face-to-face inter-particle contact of polyhedra while retaining the stress
tolerance of spheres. The arc surfaces dissipate silicon volume-expansion
stress like an arch, avoiding the edge stress concentration that fractures
sharp-cornered particles, while the regular, low-tortuosity slit pores formed
on packing ease Li-ion transport. Quantifying morphology through the
polyhedron degree Q is a promising route to predicting and optimizing rate
and cycling performance from particle shape alone. Further optimization,
notably removing the residual fine particles visible in the SEM that inflate
specific surface area and irreversible lithium consumption during initial
solid-electrolyte interphase formation, could be expected to reduce
first-cycle losses.