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Carbon coated electric arc furnace dust prepared by one-pot pyrolysis: An efficient, low carbon footprint electrode material for lithium-ion batteries

Materials Chemistry and Physics, ISSN: 0254-0584, Vol: 287, Page: 126178
2022
  • 10
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 12
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    10
    • Citation Indexes
      10
  • Captures
    12

Article Description

This work offers useful insights into the evaluation of the electric arc furnace dust in green energy applications by surface engineering. To produce low-carbon-footprint electrodes, for the first time in the open literature, the practical pyrolysis (of sucrose) method is applied to create a nanometer-thick carbon layer over the dust. Advanced techniques are used to characterize the carbon-coated electric arc furnace flue dust morphologically, structurally, and chemically. Galvanostatic tests reveal that the carbon-coated dust exhibits 600 mAh g −1 discharge capacity after 250 cycles. The rate test proves that the carbon-coated dust can withstand a high current load (2A g −1 ) and delivers 540 mAh g −1 after 250 cycles when the current load is decreased to 0.1A g −1. This obtained capacity shows that with the correct material selection and process design, it is possible to produce low-carbon footprint electrodes at a low cost. Electrochemical characterizations indicate that the lithiation reaction of the carbon-coated dust takes place similarly to that of the anode materials which are made of synthetically fabricated carbon-coated transition metal oxides and/or ferrites. It is anticipated that this study sets an example for the valorization of the various industrial wastes in energy applications in the future.

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