Hydrothermal Synthesis and Electrochemical Performance of Amorphous SiO 2 Nanospheres / Graphene Composites

The exceptional mechanical and electrical nature of grapheme makes it a viable candidate for enhancing the effectiveness of electrode material. In recent years, Graphene based SiO2 nanocomposites is a research hot topic of anode materials in lithium-ion batteries. In this paper, the amorphous SiO2 nanospheres/graphene composite was synthesized by hydrothermal method. Amorphous SiO2 is attached to the surface of graphene with a spherical structure and its average diameter is about 200 nm. The weight of SiO2 in the nanospheres composite is about 43%. Electrochemical tests showed that the amorphous SiO2 nanospheres/graphene composite exhibited the first charge and discharge capacity is respectively 329.5 mAhg and 444.1 mAhg, and remain at 257.8 mAhg and 274.6 mAhg for 50 cycles at a current density of 200 mAg. The amorphous SiO2 nanospheres/graphene composite structure is novelty and the results are of great significance to the preparation and application of new anode materials.


Introduction
As one kind of acidic non-metallic oxide, Silicon dioxide (SiO 2 ) is mainly in the form of crystalline and amorphous.The chemical properties of crystalline SiO 2 are relatively stable, while the structure of amorphous SiO 2 is irregularly continuous network one, which has higher activity than crystalline SiO 2 .Due to its low conductivity, SiO 2 had been considered difficult to use as electrode material.However, previous studies have proposed that compared with crystalline silicon oxide, amorphous SiO 2 is favored in industry with respect to cycling stability [1].
And the size and crystal structure of the SiO 2 have a significant impact on its electrochemical performance [2] [3].SiO 2 nanoparticles were found to react with Li in the voltage range of 0 -1 V and the n-Si/Li system has a lower and essentially constant electrochemical potential relative to Li/Li + , which is advantageous for use as anode materials in Li-based batteries [4].In order to explore the application of SiO 2 in electrode materials, graphene based SiO 2 nanocomposites have recently been studied in detail for applications in lithium-ion batteries, e.g., SiO 2 nanoparticles/graphene [5] [6], SiO 2 nanospheres/graphene [7] [8] and ternary composites [9] [10] Herein, we employed the hydrothermal method to fabricate amorphous SiO 2 nanospheres/grapheme (a-SiO 2 @G) nanocomposite for the first time, in which the diameter of SiO 2 is about 200 nm.The synthesis process and the structure character of a-SiO 2 @G were studied in detail.Meanwhile, the electrochemical performance of a-SiO 2 @G as anode for LIBs has also been evaluated.

Experimental
Graphite oxide (GO) was prepared from powdered flake graphite (Qingdao Jinri Graphite Co., Ltd, China) by the modified Hummer's method.Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS, AR), Tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS, AR) and NaOH (AR) were purchased from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., China.All reagents were used without further purification.The obtained GO (30 mg) was added into distilled water (3 ml) with ethanol (30 ml) respectively, 25 mg sodium dodecyl sulfate was then added, followed by 1 h ultra-sonication to make a homogeneous suspension.Then, 25 ml TEOS and 3 mg NaOH were added into the suspension respectively.After 15 min of ultrasonic treatment, the mixture was dissolved in the mixture under magnetic stirring at room temperature for 2 h.Finally, the resulting solution was transferred to 100 ml Teflon-lined stainless steel autoclave for the hydrothermal reaction.The autoclave was sealed and heated at 160˚C for 12 h in an electrical oven.After heating treatment, the autoclave was cooled to room temperature.Black products were obtained by centrifugation, washed with distilled water 3 times prior to be dried in vacuum at 60˚C for 12 h.
The carbon mass ratio was investigated by thermal gravimetric analysis (TGA, STA449F3, Germany) from 25˚C to 1000˚C.A Nova 2200e specific surface area tester (USA) was used to measure surface area of samples using Braunauer-Emmet-Teller (BET,) method.
To evaluate the electrochemical performance of the composites, the samples

Results and Discussion
Morphological investigations have been carried out to understand the shape and structure of a-SiO 2 @G composites.Figure 1 ), the corresponding interlayer distance is calculated to be 0.8117 nm, which is bigger than the previous works [11].We think that a large amount  respectively.The a-SiO 2 @G composites have the D-sband and G-band located at 1343 cm −1 and 1584 cm −1 respectively.As we known, the D peak is caused by defects of sp 2 carbon atom structure rGO, while G peak is related to the in-plane vibration of sp 2 carbon atom [12].We can see that the intensity ratio of the D to the G band (I G /I D ) of a-SiO 2 @G composites (1.044) is lower than 1.309 of GO, indicating that the defect of graphene in a-SiO 2 @G composites was significantly reduced compared with that of GO.The band at 2893 cm −1 corresponding to the 2D peak indicates the multilayer structure of rGO in the a-SiO 2 @G composites [13].According to the empirical formula: ( ) where w G is the value of G peak(1584),we can get that n = 2.2.It also means that the graphene in a-SiO 2 @G composite structure has fewer layers and higher quality.
To determine the amorphous carbon mass ratio in the a-SnO 2 @G composites, thermogravimetric analysis(TGA)is carried out with a temperature ramp of 10˚C/min and nitrogen is used as protective gas.As shown in Figure 3(a), a-SnO 2 @G composites began to lose weight even under 100˚C due to the thermal instability of GO, the occurrence of a weight loss of about 3% is attributed to release of the absorbed gases or moisture on the surface of the a-SiO 2 @G [14].
From 100˚C to 300˚C, the TGA curve declines slowly because of the decomposition of a small amount of oxygen containing functional groups of graphene [15].
The weight loss at 300˚C -900˚C is attributed to decomposition of graphene and the ratio of absorbed water, rGO and the SiO 2 in the nanospheres composite is ~3%, ~54%, and ~43% respectively.As shown in the Figure 3(b) (inset), the narrow pore size distributions appear in the a-SiO 2 @G curves with the maximum value located at 2 nm from the adsorption isotherm.The a-SiO 2 @G composites exhibit higher surface area (S BET =4 80.880 m 2 g −1 ) and its pore average diameter is 2.587 nm by the BET method.
The cycle performance and columbic efficiency (CE) of a-SiO 2 @G composites are exhibited in Figure 4(a).It can be seen that the a-SiO 2 @G composite demonstrates a relatively high initial discharge and charge capacity of 444.1 mAhg −1 and 329.5 mAhg −1 respectively.The high initial CE (74.2%), which is higher than SiO 2 @C composites [17] [18], is attributed to the large specific surface area and porous structure of the a-SiO 2 @G.The cyclic performance of the a-SiO 2 @G composites is relatively stable, and the efficiency of CE has risen to 96.4% in the second cycle.After 50 cycles, the irreversible capacity decreased to 257.8 mAhg −1 and the CE is 93.8%.As shown in Figure 4(b), the a-SiO 2 @G anode exhibits specific capacities of 329.5, 261.6, 244.5 and 239.8 mAhg −1 , at rates of 200, 400, 800 and 1600 mA g −1 respectively.The specific capacity well recovers to 246 mAhg −1 when the rate is decreased from 1600 mA g −1 to 200 mA g −1 .The higher surface area of the a-SiO 2 @G composites is beneficial to the full contact with the electrolyte and the porous structure is expected to offer enough Materials Sciences and Applications open channels as passage of electrolyte for the electrochemical reactions and suppressed the volume changes, thus accelerating the diffusion rate of lithiumions.

Conclusion
In summary, high surface area a-SiO 2 @G composite has been successfully prepared by a hydrothermal technique and investigated as anode materials for LIBs.
The amorphous SiO 2 nanospheres with a diameter of 200 nm were embedded in the rGO sheets, building a stable composite structure.And the graphene in a-SiO 2 @G composite structure has fewer layers and higher quality.Electrochemical measurement displays that the improved cycling performance is attributed to two main factors, such as large surface areas and porous structures.

Y
. W. Yang et al.DOI: 10.4236/msa.2017.813070960 Materials Sciences and Applications (a)  illustrates that the prepared SiO 2 shows spherical shape, monodispersed nanospheres with the diameter about 200 nm.The TEM image of graphene is displayed inset of Figure1(a) and it can be seen that the graphene in the nanocomposite structure is an obvious lamellar structure with many folds on its surface.The semi-transparent graphene sheets with anchored SiO 2 nanospheres are clearly visible in Figure1(b), thereby confirming the attachment of SiO 2 nanospheres to the surface of grapheme.The crystalline of prepared samples is analyzed in the range of 5˚ -80˚ as depicted in.From the natural graphite XRD pattern of graph (Figure2(a)), it is easy to distinguish the characteristic diffraction peaks of natural graphite, and the Bragg diffraction angles 2θ are located at 26.4˚ and 43.3˚, respectively, corresponding to (002) and (100) two characteristic peaks.It can be seen that GO exhibits the typical (002) reflection at 2θ = 10.9˚.According to Prague's law (

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. The XRD patterns (a) of graphite, GO, a-SiO 2 @G composites and the Raman spectra of GO, a-SiO 2 @G composites.

Figure 4 .
Figure 4.The cycle performance, columbic efficiency (a) and rate performance (b) of a-SiO 2 @G composites.

Figure 3 (
Figure 3(b)  shows the nitrogen adsorption-desorption curves and pore size distribution of the a-SiO 2 @G composites.The N 2 adsorption-desorption isotherm for a-SiO 2 @G is of type IV classification with H1 hysteresis (P/P 0 = 0.4 -0.90), indicating that there are a lot of mesopores existing in the composites[16].
Defulong anti-corrosion equipment Co. Ltd., China) in a weight ratio of 7:2:1 in N-methylpyrrolidinone (NMP, Maiqi Technology Co. Ltd., China) solvent.Then, the slurry was uniformly cast on a copper foil and dried at 90˚C un- Y. W. Yang et al.DOI: 10.4236/msa.2017.813070961 Materials Sciences and Applications were mixed with acetylene black (Lion Co.，Japan) and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF,