Magnesium vapor-phase-driven synthesis of morphology-preserved silicon nanoparticles from silica for lithium-ion batteries

Authors
Woo, ChaeheonDong, XueZhang, XiaojieKim, YeongjinKim, Kyung InKang, JinsuKim, MinjaeLee, DonghyeonPark, Jeong SuMun, JunyoungYu, Hak KiChoi, Jae-Young
Issue Date
2026-02
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Journal of Power Sources, v.665
Abstract
Silicon nanoparticles offer an exceptional theoretical capacity for lithium-ion battery anodes, yet their scalable synthesis from abundant precursors remains hindered by costly and complex processes. Magnesiothermic reduction (MTR) of silica offers a cost-effective alternative using non-toxic precursors, but under atmospheric pressure, it often leads to severe particle aggregation and byproduct formation due to heterogeneous reactions with molten magnesium. Here, we demonstrate that low-pressure conditions (∼1 Torr) fundamentally alter the MTR mechanism by facilitating uniform vapor-phase magnesium transport, thereby enabling the synthesis of silicon nanoparticles. The resulting nanoparticles deliver 2166 mA h g−1 capacity with 73.6 % capacity retention after 100 cycles, substantially outperforming silicon synthesized under atmospheric pressure MTR (33 % retention). Unlike previous MTR studies that consistently yield micrometer-scale aggregated particles regardless of precursor size, our pressure-controlled method enables the synthesis of silicon nanoparticles. This work establishes fundamental design principles for pressure-controlled metallothermic processes that achieve thermal management without a heat-sink medium and demonstrates gram-scale synthesis of high-performance silicon anode materials.
Keywords
ELECTROLYTE INTERPHASE SEI; PERFORMANCE ANODE MATERIAL; MAGNESIOTHERMIC REDUCTION; POROUS SILICON; STATES; Vapor-phase magnesiothermic reduction; Morphology preservation; Lithium-ion batteries; Silicon anodes; Silicon nanoparticles
ISSN
0378-7753
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/154098
DOI
10.1016/j.jpowsour.2025.239007
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2026
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

BROWSE