Nanostructured Lithium-ion Battery Materials: Synthesis and Applications provides a detailed overview of nanostructured materials for application in Li-ion batteries, supporting improvements in materials selection and battery performance. The book begins by presenting the fundamentals of Lithium-ion batteries, including electrochemistry and reaction mechanism, advantages and disadvantages of Li-ion batteries, and characterization methods. Subsequent sections provide in-depth coverage of a range of nanostructured materials as applied to cathodes, electrolytes, separators, and anodes. Finally, other key aspects are discussed, including industrial scale-up, safety, life cycle analysis, recycling, and future research trends. This is a valuable resource for researchers, faculty, and advanced students across nanotechnology, materials science, battery technology, energy storage, chemistry, applied physics, chemical engineering, and electrical engineering. In an industrial setting, this book will be of interest to scientists, engineers, and R&D professionals working with advanced materials for Li-ion batteries and other energy storage applications.
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Part I: Introduction to Lithium-ion Battery Systems 1. Introduction and History of Lithium-ion Batteries 2. Electrochemistry and Basic Reaction Mechanism of Lithium-ion Batteries 3. Advantages and Disadvantages of Lithium-ion Batteries 4. Characterization Methods for Lithium-ion Batteries Part II: Nanostructured Cathode Materials for Li-ion Batteries 5. Hollow Carbon Spheres and Their Hybrid Nanomaterials as Cathode Materials 6. Nanostructured Conductive Polymers as Active Electrode Composites 7. Nanostructured Metal-Oxides as Cathode Materials Part III: Nanostructured Electrolyte Materials for Li-ion Batteries 8. Aqueous Electrolyte for Li-ion Batteries 9. Non-aqueous Electrolyte for Li-ion Batteries 10. Ionic Liquid Electrolyte for Li-ion Batteries 11. Hybrid Electrolyte for Li-ion Batteries Part IV: Nanostructured Separator Materials for Li-ion Batteries 12. Functionalized Polyolefin Separators 13. Nanostructures Separators Based on Non-Polyolefin Polymers Part V: Nanostructured Anode Materials for Li-ion Batteries 14. CNT-Metal Oxide Composites as Cathode Materials 15. Carbonaceous Nanostructured Materials as Anodes 16. Titanium based Oxides as Anodes 17. Metal Alloys Materials as Anodes 18. Nanostructured Transition Metal Oxides as Anodes 19. MXene-based Nanomaterials as Anode Materials 20. Lignocellulosic Biomass Generated Activated Carbon Synthesis and its Application as an Anode Material for Lithium Ion Batteries. Part VI: Future Outlook and Challenges 21. Lithium Ion Batteries: From Lab to Industry and Safety 22. Life-Cycle Analysis of Lithium-Ion Batteries 23. Lithium-Ion Batteries: Future Market Challenges and Recycling
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A comprehensive guide to Lithium-ion batteries, covering fundamentals, materials, preparation methods, scale-up, life cycle, and future opportunities
Introduces fundamental of Lithium-ion batteries, electrochemistry, and characterization methods Offers in-depth information on nanostructured cathode, electrolyte, separator, and anode materials Addresses lab to industry challenges, safety, lifecycle analysis, recycling, and future opportunities
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780443133381
Publisert
2024-10-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Elsevier - Health Sciences Division
Vekt
450 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
191 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
660

Om bidragsyterne

Sabu Thomas is a Professor and Director of the International and Interuniversity Centre for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, Mahatma Gandhi University, India. He is internationally recognized for his contributions to polymer science and engineering, with his research interests encompassing polymer nanocomposites, elastomers, polymer blends, interpenetrating polymer networks, polymer membranes, green composites, nanocomposites, nanomedicine, and green nanotechnology. His groundbreaking inventions in polymer nanocomposites, polymer blends, green bionanotechnology, and nano-biomedical sciences have significantly advanced the development of new materials for the automotive, space, housing, and biomedical fields. Prof. Oumarou Savadogo is Full Professor and UNESCO Chair on Sustainable Engineering and Applied Solar Technologies, at Polytechnique Montréal, Quebec, Canada. With a background in materials science, he was also previously a process engineer at Rhône-Siltec (production of silicon for photovoltaic solar cells) and a postdoctoral fellow at CNRS-Bellevue, both in France. At Polytechnique Montréal, he is Founding Director of the Laboratory of New Materials for Energy and Electrochemistry, and is responsible for the graduate programs on Renewable Energy in Energy Engineering and Energy and Sustainable Development in Chemical Engineering. Prof. Savadogo’s research interests include the development of new materials for solar energy, fuel cells, batteries, electrochemical capacitors, electrochemistry, metallurgical processes, corrosion, and microbial cells. He is author or co-author of more than 200 scientific publications in refereed scientific journals, Founding Editor of the Journal of New Materials for Electrochemical Systems, and a member of the advisory/editorial boards of the Journal of Enzyme Engineering, the Journal of Materials, Membranes, and Discover Energy. He is also member of the Broad of Directors and Advisory Board of the International Hydrogen Energy Association. Amadou Belal Gueye is a Research Scholar at the School of Chemical Sciences, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, India. He received his bachelor’s degree in physics-chemistry and his master’s degree in physical chemistry applied to energy and analysis, from Cheikh Anta Diop University, Dakar, Senegal. He works in the field of lithium/sulfur batteries. She completed her Ph.D. in 2015. Following her Ph.D., she conducted postdoctoral research at the Centre for Advanced Materials, Qatar University, Doha-Qatar, under Prof. Mariam Ali S A Al-Maadeed, where she worked on improving the adhesion between fibers and LDPE via plasma modification. She also pursued postdoctoral research with Prof. Koichi Goda in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, Yamaguchi University, Japan, in collaboration with TOCLAS Corporation, Japan. She was awarded the Dr. D. S. Kothari Postdoctoral Fellowship (DSKPDF) to work with Prof. Sabu Thomas at Mahatma Gandhi University.