Chemical modification by doping of graphitic carbon and silicon based anode materials
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Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science
Abstract
This body of work investigates the structural, chemical, and electrochemical effects of substitutional doping on three distinct materials systems: phosphorus-doped graphitic carbon, aluminum-doped graphitic carbon, and phosphorus-doped silicon. Success of doping is found to depend on the synthetic route employed (bottom-up or top-down) as well as the selection of dopant with respect to the host material. Al- and P-doped graphitic carbons were prepared by bottom-up pyrolysis of liquid precursors at low to modest temperatures (800-1100 °C). In both cases, doping was found to be challenging to achieve without the formation of byproducts and phase segregation. Efforts to synthesize phosphorus-doped graphitic carbons led to an interesting discovery that the phosphorus allotrope side-product could be controlled by altering the precursor. This work quantifies the relative phosphorus allotropes present (white, red, or a combination thereof) in each composite using a combination of materials characterization techniques. Such materials are interesting lithium-ion anode materials that exhibit the first evidence of the reversible lithiation of white phosphorus, enabled by stabilization of P 4 domains between graphitic sheets. Aluminum- doped graphitic carbon, on the other hand, was found to be extremely difficult to obtain without forming mullite (3Al 2O 3 x 2SiO 2) as a byproduct. Nevertheless, we report the first signature of trigonal planar or puckered AlC 3 type doping sites. Lastly, we explored phosphorus-doped silicon materials prepared via top-down solid-state synthesis strategies. Homogenously and heterogeneously doped silicon nanoparticles were obtained by exploring a wide range of synthetic parameters and successful doping was confirmed by X-ray diffraction. Phosphorus doping in dilute quantities (1000 ppm) is found to unambiguously and positively impact the electrochemical performance of silicon as a lithium-ion anode. Ultimately, the work presented in this thesis illuminates the challenges associated with doping by both bottom-up and top-down synthesis strategies while also exploring the electrochemical relevance of chemically-modified graphitic and silicon-based materials.