TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The present invention relates to an electrode that leads to an electric storage device
with a high energy density and excellent cycle life. This invention also relates to
a method for producing this electrode and for producing an electric storage device
provided with this electrode. The present invention further relates to a conductive
carbon mixture that is used for producing the electrode of an electric storage device.
THE RELATED ART
[0002] An electric storage device such as a secondary battery, an electric double layer
capacitor, a redox capacitor and a hybrid capacitor is a device that is under consideration
for wider application as a battery for an information device including a cellphone
and a notebook-sized personal computer, for a motor drive power supply of a low-emission
vehicle such as an electric vehicle and a hybrid vehicle, and for an energy recovery
system, etc. In these devices, improvements in energy density and cycle life are desired
to meet the requirements of higher performance and downsizing.
[0003] In these electric storage devices, an electrode active material that realizes its
capacity by a faradaic reaction involving the transfer of an electron with an ion
in an electrolyte (including an electrolytic solution) or by a nonfaradaic reaction
not involving the transfer of an electron is used for energy storage. Further, this
active material is generally used in the form of a composite material with an electroconductive
agent. As the electroconductive agent, conductive carbon such as carbon black, natural
graphite, artificial graphite, and carbon nanotube is generally used. This conductive
carbon, used concurrently with a low conductive active material, serves to add conductivity
to the composite material, and furthermore, acts as a matrix to absorb the volume
change in accordance with the reaction of the active material. Also, it serves to
ensure an electron conducting path when the active material is mechanically damaged.
[0004] The composite material of the active material and the conductive carbon is generally
manufactured by a method of mixing particles of the active material and the conductive
carbon. The conductive carbon does not make a significant contribution to the improvement
of the energy density of an electric storage device, so the quantity of the conductive
carbon per unit volume needs to be decreased and that of the active material needs
to be increased to obtain an electric storage device with a high energy density. Therefore,
consideration is given to a method to decrease the distance between the particles
of the active material to increase the quantity of the active material per unit volume
by improving the dispersibility of the conductive carbon or by reducing the structure
of the conductive carbon.
[0005] For example, Patent Document 1 (
JP 2004-134304 A) discloses a nonaqueous secondary battery that is equipped with a positive electrode
that contains a small-sized carbon material having an average primary particle diameter
of 10 to 100 nm (in its example, acetylene black) and that has a degree of blackness
of 1.20 or more. A coating material used to form the positive electrode is obtained
either by dispersing a mixture of an active material for a positive electrode, the
abovementioned carbon material, a binder and a solvent by a high shear dispersing
machine such as a high speed rotational homogenizer dispersing machine or a planetary
mixer with three or more rotary axes, or by adding a dispersion body, in which a mixture
of the abovementioned carbon material, a binder and a solvent are dispersed by a high
shear dispersing machine, into a paste in which a mixture of the active material for
a positive electrode, a binder and a solvent are dispersed, and further dispersing.
By using the device that has a high shearing force, the carbon material, which is
hard to disperse because of its small particle size, becomes evenly dispersed.
[0006] Also, Patent Document 2 (
JP 2009-35598 A) discloses an electroconductive agent for an electrode for a nonaqueous secondary
battery that consists of acetylene black whose BET-specific surface area is 30 to
90 m
2/g, dibutylphthalate (DBP) oil absorption quantity is 50 to 120 mL/100 g, and pH is
9 or more. The electrode for the secondary battery is formed by dispersing a mixture
of this acetylene black and an active material in a fluid containing a binder to prepare
slurry, and applying this slurry on a current collector and drying it. Since the acetylene
black with the abovementioned characteristics has a smaller structure compared with
Ketjen Black or other conventional acetylene blacks, the bulk density of a mixture
of the acetylene black and the active material is improved and the battery capacity
is improved.
[0007] Moreover, it is also considered that an even distribution state of an active material
and a conductive carbon is created by covering a part or all of the surface of the
particles of the active material so that the conductive property among the active
materials is increased and degradation of the cycle life is prevented. For example,
Patent Document 3 (
JP H11-283623 A) discloses a method in which base particles of a lithium composite oxide such as
LiCoO
2, which act as an active material, and sub-particles of a carbon material such as
acetylene black, which act as a conductive agent, are blended while compressive and
shearing actions are applied so that a part or all of the surface of the base particles
of the composite oxide is covered with the sub-particles of the carbon material. Patent
document 3 also discloses that the composite material obtained by this method is used
for a positive electrode of a nonaqueous secondary battery. Patent Document 4 (
JP 2013 077479 A) discloses a battery comprising an electrode comprising a mixture of oxidized carbon
black and carbon nanofibers as conducting agent, and LiFePO4 as cathode material.
Patent document 4 further discloses a method of manufacturing an electrode comprising
the steps of blending an active material with oxidized carbon and coating it on a
current collector. Patent Document 5 (
JP 2006 261062 A) discloses a battery comprising a positive electrode comprising a LiFePO4 cathode
material supported on a hydrophilic carbon black obtained by oxidation of carbon with
a HNO3/ H2SO4 solution. The electrode is characterized by a weight ratio of 95:5 of
LiFePO4:hydrophilic carbon black. Patent Document 6 (
US 2012/321953 A1) discloses a battery comprising a lithium vanadium oxide-based electrode obtained
by mixing the cathode material precursor to a graphene oxide obtained by oxidation
of graphite with HNO3/H2SO4 solution. The ratio between graphene oxide and active
material is 99:1.
PRIOR ARTS DOCUMENTS
PATENT DOCUMENTS
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
PLOBLEMS TO BE SOLVED BY THE INVENTION
[0009] Further improvement of an electric storage device in terms of energy density is always
desired. However, the inventors have examined the prior arts and found that even by
the methods disclosed in Patent Documents 1 and 2, it is difficult to enable conductive
carbon to infiltrate efficiently between particles of an active material, and therefore,
it is difficult to shorten the distance between the active material particles and
increase the amount of the active material per unit volume. Therefore, the inventors
have found that there is a limitation to the improvement of the energy density with
a positive electrode and/or a negative electrode using the composite material of particles
of an active material and conductive carbon. Also, there was a limit to the increase
in energy density that could be obtained even by a method of using carbon particles
to cover the surface of particles of an active material as shown in Patent Document
3, and a satisfactory cycle life could not be obtained because of reasons such as
the dissolution of active materials into an electrolytic solution of a nonaqueous
secondary battery.
[0010] Therefore, the objective of the present invention is to provide an electrode that
leads to an electric storage device with a high energy density and excellent cycle
life.
MEANS FOR SOLVING PROBLEMS
[0011] After a keen examination, the inventors have found that the abovementioned purpose
is achieved by composing an electrode of an electric storage device by using an electrode
material comprising an oxidized carbon, which is obtained by giving a strong oxidizing
treatment to a carbon raw material and particles of an active material.
[0012] Therefore, the present invention, first of all, relates to a conductive carbon mixture
for producing an electrode for an electric storage device, comprising an oxidized
conductive carbon obtained by giving an oxidizing treatment to a carbon raw material
selected from a group consisting of porous carbon powder, Ketjen Black, furnace black
with pores, carbon nanofiber and carbon nanotube and having a hydrophilic part accounting
for 10 % by mass or more of the entire oxidized conductive carbon; and a different
conductive carbon which is different from the oxidized conductive carbon.
[0013] The oxidized carbon obtained by giving an oxidizing treatment to a carbon raw material
is easily attachable to the surface of the particles of the active material. Moreover,
the oxidized carbon obtained by giving a strong oxidizing treatment is compressed
integrally and spreads in a paste-like manner when pressure is applied to it, and
is hard to separate. Therefore, when the oxidized carbon obtained by giving a strong
oxidizing treatment and the particles of the active material are blended to obtain
an electrode material for an electrode of an electric storage device, the oxidized
carbon is attached to and covers the surface of the particles of the active material
in the process of blending and the dispersity of the particles of the active material
is improved. Also, by the pressure applied to the oxidized carbon in the process of
blending, at least part of the oxidized carbon spreads in a paste-like manner and
the surface of the particles of the active material becomes partially covered. Moreover,
when an active material layer is formed with this electrode material on a current
collector of an electrode and pressure is applied to the active material layer, the
oxidized carbon further spreads and has become dense while covering the surface of
the particles of the active material, the particles of the active material approach
each other, and accordingly the oxidized carbon which is gelatinized is pushed out
not only into gaps that are formed between the active material particles adjacent
to each other, but also into pores that exist on the surface of the particles of the
active material (including gaps between primary particles that are found in secondary
particles) and densely fills the gaps and pores while covering the surface of the
particles of the active material (see Figure 2). Therefore, the amount of the active
material per unit volume in the electrode is increased and electrode density is increased.
Moreover, the paste-like oxidized carbon that is densely filled has sufficient conductivity
to serve as a conductive agent.
[0014] In the electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention, the paste-like
conductive carbon that is derived from the oxidized carbon also exists inside a gap
that is formed between the electrode active material particles adjacent to each other
and/or a pore that exists on the surface of the electrode active material particle,
the gap and the pore having a width of 50 nm or less. Therefore, the coverage of the
surface of the particles of the active material by the paste-like conductive carbon
is improved, the conductive property of the entire active material layer is improved,
and the electrode density is also improved. The term "the width of the gap formed
between the electrode active material particles adjacent to each other" means the
shortest distance of the distances between the adjacent particles of the electrode
active material and the term "the width of the pore that exists on the surface of
the electrode active material" means the shortest distance of the distances between
the points at the opposite ends of the pore.
[0015] It has been found that, although the electrode of the present invention has the active
material layer comprising the densely-filled paste-like conductive carbon, the impregnation
of an electrolytic solution to the electrode in an electric storage device is not
inhibited. It has also been found by measuring the pore distribution of the active
material layer of the electrode by a mercury intrusion method that the active material
layer has pores with a diameter of 5 to 40 nm in a preferred embodiment of the electrode
of the present invention. These pores are considered to be mostly the pores in the
paste-like conductive carbon that is derived from an oxidized carbon and has become
dense. These pores are so large that the electrolytic solution in the electric storage
device passes through the paste-like conductive carbon and reaches the particles of
the active material. Therefore, the paste-like conductive carbon in the electrode
has a sufficient conductive property and does not inhibit the impregnation of the
electrolytic solution in the electric storage device. As a result, the energy density
of the electric storage device is improved.
[0016] Moreover, it has been found that, probably because the surface of the particles of
the active material is covered by the dense, paste-like conductive carbon up to the
inner side of the pores that exist on the surface of the particles of the active material
in the active material layer of the electrode of the present invention, dissolution
of the active material in the electrolytic solution is inhibited and the cycle characteristic
of the electric storage device is improved, although the impregnation of the electrolytic
solution to the electrode in the electric storage device is not inhibited.
[0017] The oxidized carbon that leads to the abovementioned past-like conductive carbon
comprises a hydrophilic part and that the contained amount of the hydrophilic part
is 10 % by mass or more of the entire oxidized carbon. The "hydrophilic part" of carbon
means the following: 0.1 g of carbon is added to 20 ml of an ammonia aqueous solution
with pH 11, ultrasonic irradiation is applied for 1 minute, and a fluid obtained is
left for 5 hours to precipitate its solid phase part. The part that does not precipitate
and is dispersed in the ammonia aqueous solution with pH 11 is the "hydrophilic part."
Also, the contained amount of the hydrophilic part in the entire carbon can be calculated
by the following method: After the precipitation of the solid phase part, the supernatant
fluid is removed, the remaining part is dried, and the weight of the solid object
after drying is measured. The weight calculated by subtracting the weight of the solid
object after drying from the weight of the initial carbon (0.1 g) is the weight of
the "hydrophilic part," which is dispersed in the ammonia aqueous solution with pH
11. The weight ratio of the weight of the "hydrophilic part" against the weight of
the initial carbon (0.1 g) is the contained amount of the "hydrophilic part" in the
carbon.
[0018] The ratio of the hydrophilic part in conductive carbon such as carbon black, natural
graphite and carbon nanotube, which is used as a conductive agent in an electrode
of a conventional electric storage device, is 5 % by mass or less of the entire conductive
carbon. However, by using a carbon having an inner vacancy as a raw material and giving
an oxidizing treatment to this raw material, the surface of its particles is oxidized
and a hydroxy group, a carboxy group and an ether bond are introduced into the carbon,
and a conjugated double bond of the carbon is oxidized so that a carbon single bond
is formed, a carbon-carbon bond is partially severed, and a hydrophilic part is formed
on the surface of the particles. Then, as the intensity of the oxidizing treatment
is increased, the percentage of the hydrophilic part in the carbon particle is increased
and the hydrophilic part accounts for 10 % by mass or more of the entire carbon. Moreover,
such an oxidized carbon is likely to be compressed integrally and spread in a paste-like
manner when pressure is applied to it, cover most or all of the surface of the particles
of the active material up to the inside of the pores that exist on the surface of
the particles of the active material, and become dense. As a result, an electrode
in which 80 % or more, preferably 90 % or more and especially preferably 95 % or more
of the surface (outer surface) of the particles of the active material in the active
material layer of the electrode contacts the paste-like conductive carbon, which is
derived from the oxidized carbon and become dense, can be obtained. The coverage rate
of the surface of the particles of the active material by the paste-like conductive
carbon is a value calculated by observation of SEM images of the cross-sectional surface
of the active material layer at a magnification of 25,000.
[0019] In the electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention, it is
preferable that the electrode active material particles in the active material layer
are composed of fine particles with an average diameter of 0.01 to 2 µm that are operable
as a positive electrode active material or a negative electrode active material and
gross particles with an average diameter of more than 2 µm and not more than 25 µm
that are operable as an active material of the same electrode as the fine particles.
The gross particles increase the electrode density on their own and also have an effect
of suitably pressing the oxidized carbon at the time of producing an electrode material
and producing an electrode, swiftly transforming the oxidized carbon to paste and
making it dense, and therefore increasing the electrode density and improving the
energy density of the electric storage device. Also, due to the pressure applied to
the active material layer in producing the electrode, the fine particles press the
oxidized carbon, at least part of which is gelatinized, and are pushed out into the
gaps that are formed between the adjacent gross particles together with the paste-like
oxidized carbon, so that the electrode density further increases and the energy density
of the electric storage device further improves. The average diameter of the active
material particles is the 50 % radius (median diameter) as in the measurement of particle
size distribution obtained by using a light scattering particle size meter.
[0020] In the electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention, it is
preferable that a different kind of conductive carbon, especially conductive carbon
that has a higher electroconductivity than the paste-like conductive carbon that is
derived from the oxidized carbon, is further comprised in the active material layer.
When pressure is applied to the active material layer when the electrode is produced,
this carbon is also covered by the paste-like conductive carbon and densely fills
the gaps formed by the adjacent particles of the active material together with the
paste-like conductive carbon and the conductivity of the active material layer is
improved, so that the energy density of the electric storage device further improves.
[0021] In the electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention, it is
preferable that the mass ratio of the electrode active material particle and the conductive
carbon in the active material layer is within the range of 95:5 to 99:1. If the different
conductive carbon is comprised in addition to the paste-like conductive carbon that
is derived from the oxidized carbon, it is preferable that the mass ratio of the total
amount of these carbons and the electrode active material particle is within the abovementioned
range. If the ratio of the conductive carbon is lower than the abovementioned range,
the conductive property of the active material layer tends to become insufficient,
and the cycle characteristic tends to decrease because the coverage rate of the conductive
carbon over the active material particles decreases. If the ratio of the conductive
carbon is larger than the abovementioned range, the electrode density tends to decrease
and the energy density of the electric storage device tends to decrease.
[0022] As mentioned above, the electrode for an electric storage device of the present invention
can be suitably produced by a method comprising:
a preparation process of blending the electrode active material particle and the oxidized
carbon obtained by giving an oxidizing treatment to a carbon raw material with an
inner vacancy so that an electrode material, in which at least part of the oxidized
carbon is gelatinized and attached to the surface of the electrode active material
particle, is prepared; and
a pressure process of forming the active material layer on a current collector with
the electrode material and applying pressure to the active material layer.
[0023] Therefore, the present invention also relates to a method of producing a conductive
carbon mixture for producing an electrode for an electric storage device comprising:
a carbon-oxidizing step of obtaining an oxidized conductive carbon by giving an oxidizing
treatment to the carbon raw material; a carbon-selecting step of obtaining a contained
amount of the hydrophilic part in the oxidized conductive carbon obtained in the carbon-oxidizing
step by the process of adding 0.1 g of the oxidized conductive carbon obtained in
the carbon-oxidizing step to 20 ml of an ammonia aqueous solution with pH 11, applying
ultrasonic irradiation for 1 minute, leaving a fluid obtained for 5 hours to precipitate
its solid phase part, removing a supernatant fluid having the hydrophilic part, drying
a remaining part, measuring the weight of a solid object after drying, obtaining the
weight of the hydrophilic part by subtracting the weight of the solid object after
drying from the initial weight 0.1 g of the oxidized conductive carbon, and calculating
the ratio of the weight of the hydrophilic part against the initial weight 0.1g of
the oxidized conductive carbon, and then selecting the oxidized conductive carbon
having the hydrophilic part in the amount of 10 % by mass or more of the entire oxidized
conductive carbon; and a combining step of dry blending the oxidized conductive carbon
selected with the different conductive carbon so that at least part of the oxidized
conductive carbon selected is deformed into the paste-like state and the deformed
oxidized conductive carbon is attached to a surface of the different conductive carbon.
[0024] Fine carbon particles are poorly compatible with a binder and a solvent. Therefore,
when an electrode material in the form of slurry containing a binder and a solvent
is prepared, wet blending by using a high shear dispersing device, or a blending method
in which the particles of an electrode active material and carbon are dry blended
and then a binder and a solvent are added and wet blended, are commonly used as mentioned
above in relation to Patent Document 1 and Patent Document 2. However, the abovementioned
conductive carbon mixture produces an electrode with a high electrode density and
excellent conductive property irrespective of the blending method of the conductive
carbon mixture and the particles of the electrode active material.
ADVANTAGEOUS EFFECTS OF THE INVENTION
[0025] In the electrode of the present invention that has an active material layer comprising
an electrode active material particle and a paste-like conductive carbon that is derived
from an oxidized carbon obtained by giving an oxidizing treatment to a carbon raw
material and covers a surface of the electrode active material particle, the paste-like
conductive carbon that is derived from the oxidized carbon is densely filled not only
into the gaps formed between the particles of an active material but also into the
inside of the pores that exist on the surface of the particles of the active material,
so that the amount of the active material per unit volume in the electrode is increased,
and the electrode density is increased. Also, the paste-like conductive carbon that
is densely filled has a sufficient conductive property to function as a conductive
agent and does not inhibit the impregnation of the electrolytic solution in the electric
storage device. Therefore, the energy density of the electric storage device is improved.
Also, probably because the surface of the active material particles is covered by
the oxidized carbon that spreads in a paste-like manner up to the inside of the pores
that exist on the surface of the active material particles in the electrode of the
present invention, dissolution of the active material in the electrolytic solution
is inhibited and the cycle characteristic of the electric storage device is improved
when the electrode of the present invention is used in the electric storage device.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026]
Fig. 1 shows a graph in which the relationship between the contained amount of a hydrophilic
part of an oxidized carbon and the electrode density is shown for electrodes of working
examples and comparative examples.
Fig. 2 shows SEM images of the cross-section of an electrode of a working example:
(A) at a magnification of 1,500 and (B) at a magnification of 25,000.
Fig. 3 shows SEM images of the cross-section of an electrode of a comparative example:
(A) at a magnification of 1,500 and (B) at a magnification of 25,000.
Fig. 4 shows a graph that shows the result of measuring the distribution of pores
in electrodes shown in Figs. 2 and 3 by the mercury intrusion method.
Fig. 5 shows the rate characteristics of a lithium ion secondary battery that has
an electrode of a working example or a comparative example.
Fig. 6 shows a graph that shows the cycle characteristics of a lithium ion secondary
battery, the rate characteristics of which are shown in Fig. 5.
Fig. 7 shows the rate characteristics of a lithium ion secondary battery that has
an electrode of a working example or a comparative example.
Fig. 8 shows a graph that shows the cycle characteristics of a lithium ion secondary
battery, the rate characteristics of which are shown in Fig. 7.
Fig. 9 shows the rate characteristics of a lithium ion secondary battery that has
an electrode of a working example or a comparative example.
Fig. 10 shows a graph that shows the cycle characteristics of a lithium ion secondary
battery, the rate characteristics of which are shown in Fig. 9.
Fig. 11 shows an SEM image at a magnification of 50,000 of a mixture that is obtained
by dry blending of an oxidized carbon, acetylene black and particles of an active
material.
Fig. 12 shows the rate characteristics of a lithium ion secondary battery that has
an electrode of a working example or a comparative example.
Fig. 13 shows a graph that shows the cycle characteristics of a lithium ion secondary
battery, the rate characteristics of which are shown in Fig. 12.
Fig. 14 shows SEM images at a magnification of 50,000 of a mixture that is obtained
by dry blending of an oxidized carbon or acetylene black and fine particles of an
active material.
Fig. 15 shows SEM images at a magnification of 100,000 of a mixture that is obtained
by dry blending of an oxidized carbon or acetylene black and gross particles of an
active material.
Fig. 16 shows a SEM image at a magnification of 50,000 of a conductive carbon mixture.
Fig. 17 shows TEM images of a conductive carbon mixture: (A) at a magnification of
100,000 and (B) at a magnification of 500,000.
Fig. 18 shows a SEM image at a magnification of 25,000 of the cross-section of the
electrode of a working example that is manufactured with a conductive carbon mixture.
Fig. 19 shows a graph that shows the result of measuring the DC internal resistance
of a lithium ion secondary battery in which an electrode of a working example or a
comparative example is used.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0027] An electrode for an electric storage device of the present invention has an active
material layer that comprises an electrode active material particle and a paste-like
conductive carbon that is derived from an oxidized carbon obtained by giving an oxidizing
treatment to a carbon raw material with an inner vacancy and covers a surface of the
electrode active material particle. The oxidized carbon before it is gelatinized is
described first, and then the electrode of the present invention and an electric storage
device provided with the electrode is described.
(1) Oxidized carbon
[0028] In the electrode of the present invention, the oxidized carbon that leads to the
paste-like conductive carbon comprised in the active material layer is produced by
using as a raw material a carbon with an inner vacancy such as porous carbon powder,
Ketjen Black, furnace black with pores, carbon nanofiber and carbon nanotube. It is
preferable to use a carbon with an inner vacancy whose specific surface area as measured
by the BET method is 300 m
2/g or more as a carbon raw material because the carbon is prone to become an oxidized
carbon that is gelatinized by oxidizing treatment. Above all, spherical particles
such as Ketjen Black and furnace black with pores are preferable. An oxidized carbon
that is gelatinized is hard to be obtained even if a solid carbon is used as a raw
material and oxidizing treatment is given.
[0029] A heretofore-known oxidizing treatment can be used without any restriction for oxidizing
treatment of the carbon raw material with an inner vacancy. For example, the oxidized
carbon can be obtained by treating the carbon raw material in a solution of acid or
hydrogen peroxide. For the acid, nitric acid, a mixture of nitric acid and sulfuric
acid, and hypochlorous acid aqueous solution can be used. Also, the oxidized carbon
can be obtained by heating the carbon raw material in an oxygen-containing atmosphere,
water vapor or carbon dioxide. Moreover, the oxidized carbon can be obtained by plasma
treatment, ultraviolet irradiation, corona discharge treatment, and glow discharge
treatment of the carbon raw material in an oxygen-containing atmosphere.
[0030] When the oxidizing treatment is applied to the carbon raw material with an inner
vacancy, the surface of its particle is oxidized, and a hydroxy group, a carboxy group
and an ether bond are introduced into the carbon, and a conjugated double bond of
the carbon is oxidized so that a carbon single bond is formed, a carbon-carbon bond
is partially severed, and a part having high hydrophilicity is formed on the surface
of the particle. The oxidized carbon with such hydrophilic part easily attaches to
the surface of the particles of an active material and aggregation of the particles
of an active material is effectively inhibited. Then, as the intensity of the oxidizing
treatment is increased, the ratio of the hydrophilic part in the carbon particle is
increased and the oxidized carbon that is gelatinized in the process of producing
an electrode is obtained. It is preferable that the contained amount of the hydrophilic
part in the oxidized carbon is 10 % by mass or more of the entire oxidized carbon.
It is especially preferable that the contained amount of the hydrophilic part in the
oxidized carbon is 12 % by mass or more and 30 % by mass or less of the entire oxidized
carbon.
[0031] The oxidized carbon having a hydrophilic part that account for 10 % by mass or more
of the entire oxidized carbon can be suitably obtained by the manufacturing method
comprising:
- (a) a process in which acidic treatment is given to a carbon raw material with an
inner vacancy;
- (b) a process in which the product after the acidic treatment and a transition metal
compound are mixed;
- (c) a process in which the mixture obtained is pulverized to produce a mechanochemical
reaction;
- (d) a process in which the product after the mechanochemical reaction is heated in
a nonoxidizing atmosphere; and
- (e) a process in which the aforementioned transition metal compound and/or its reaction
product is removed from the product after heating.
[0032] In the (a) process, the carbon raw material with an inner vacancy, preferably Ketjen
Black, is left immersed in acid. An ultrasonic wave can be irradiated during this
immersion. As acid, an acid usually used for an oxidizing treatment of carbon such
as nitric acid, a mixture of nitric acid and sulfuric acid, and an aqueous solution
of hypochlorous acid can be used. The immersion time depends on the concentration
of acid or the quantity of the carbon raw material to be treated, and is usually within
the range of 5 minutes to 5 hour. The carbon after acidic treatment is sufficiently
washed by water and dried, and then mixed with the transition metal compound in the
(b) process.
[0033] For the chemical compound of transition metal to be added to the carbon raw material
in the (b) process, an inorganic metallic salt of transition metal such as a halide,
nitrate, sulfate and carbonate; an organic metallic salt of transition metal such
as formate, acetate, oxalate, methoxide, ethoxide and isopropoxide; or a mixture thereof
can be used. These chemical compounds can be used alone, or two or more kinds can
be used as a mixture. Chemical compounds that contain different transition metals
can be mixed in a prescribed amount and used. Also, a chemical compound other than
the chemical compound of transition metal, such as an alkali metal compound, can be
added concurrently unless it has an adverse effect on the reaction. Since the oxidized
carbon is mixed with particles of an active material and used in manufacturing an
electrode of an electric storage device, it is preferable that a chemical compound
of an element constituting the active material is added to the carbon raw material
so that adulteration of an element that can serve as impurities against the active
material can be prevented.
[0034] In the (c) process, the mixture obtained in the (b) process is pulverized and a mechanochemical
reaction is produced. Examples of a powdering machine for this reaction are a mashing
machine, stone mill, ball mill, bead mill, rod mill, roller mill, agitation mill,
planetary mill, vibrating mill, hybridizer, mechanochemical composite device and jet
mill. Milling time depends on the powdering machine used or the quantity of the carbon
to be treated and has no strict restrictions, but is generally within the range of
5 minutes to 3 hours. The (d) process is conducted in a nonoxidizing atmosphere such
as a nitrogen atmosphere and an argon atmosphere. The temperature and time of heating
is chosen in accordance with the chemical compound of transition metal used. In the
subsequent (e) process, the oxidized carbon having a hydrophilic part that account
for 10 % by mass or more of the entire oxidized carbon can be obtained by removing
the chemical compound of transition metal and/or its reaction product from the product
that has been heated by means of acid dissolution etc., then sufficiently washing
and drying.
[0035] In the manufacturing method, the chemical compound of transition metal promotes the
oxidation of the carbon raw material by the mechanochemical reaction in the (c) process,
and the oxidation of the carbon raw material rapidly proceeds. By this oxidation,
the oxidized carbon that comprises a hydrophilic part, which is 10 % by mass or more
of the entire oxidized carbon, can be obtained.
[0036] The oxidized carbon having a hydrophilic part that accounts for 10 % by mass or more
of the entire oxidized carbon can be obtained by giving a strong oxidizing treatment
to a carbon raw material with an inner vacancy, and it is also possible to facilitate
the oxidation of the carbon raw material with an inner vacancy by a method other than
the abovementioned method of production.
[0037] The oxidized carbon obtained is used for an electrode of an electric storage device
such as a secondary battery, an electric double layer capacitor, a redox capacitor
and a hybrid capacitor in an embodiment in which the oxidized carbon is mixed with
an electrode active material that realizes its capacity by a faradaic reaction that
involves the transfer of an electron between an ion in an electrolyte of an electric
storage device or a nonfaradaic reaction that does not involve the transfer of an
electron.
(2) Electrode
[0038] The electrode for an electric storage device of the present invention can be suitably
obtained by a method of production that comprises:
- (A) a preparation process of blending an electrode active material particle and the
oxidized carbon so that an electrode material, in which at least part of the oxidized
carbon is gelatinized and attached to the surface of the electrode active material
particle, is prepared; and
- (B) a pressure process of forming an active material layer on a current collector
with the electrode material and applying pressure to the active material layer.
[0039] In process (A), aggregation of the active material particles can be inhibited because
the oxidized carbon is attached to the surface of the active material particles and
covers the surface. Also, by the pressure applied to the oxidized carbon in the process
of blending, at least part of the oxidized carbon spreads in a paste-like manner and
the surface of the active material particles is partially covered.
[0040] As the electrode active material used in process (A), an active material that is
used in a conventional electric storage device as an active material for a positive
electrode or an active material for a negative electrode can be used without any specific
restrictions. The active material can be a single chemical compound or a mixture of
two or more kinds of chemical compound.
[0041] Examples of a positive electrode active material for a secondary battery are, among
all, LiMO
2 having a laminar rock salt structure, laminar Li
2MnO
3-LiMO
2 solid solution, and spinel LiM
2O
4 (M in the formula signifies Mn, Fe, Co, Ni or a combination thereof). Specific examples
of these are LiCoO
2, LiNiO
2, LiNi
4/5Co
1/5O
2, LiNi
1/3Co
1/3Mn
1/3O
2, LiNi
1/2Mn
1/2O
2, LiFeO
2, LiMnO
2, Li
2MnO
3-LiCoO
2, Li
2MnO
3-LiNiO
2, Li
2MnO
3-LiNi
1/3Co
1/3Mn
1/3O
2, Li
2MnO
3-LiNi
1/2Mn
1/2O
2, Li
2MnO
3-LiNi
1/2Mn
1/2O
2-LiNi
1/3Co
1/3Mn
1/3O
2, LiMn
2O
4 and LiMn
3/2Ni
1/2O
4. Other examples include sulfur and a sulfide such as Li
2S, TiS
2, MoS
2, FeS
2, VS
2 and Cr
1/2V
1/2S
2, a selenide such as NbSe
3, VSe
2 and NbSe
3, an oxide such as Cr
2O
5, Cr
3O
8, VO
2, V
3O
8, V
2O
5 and V
6O
13 as well as a complex oxide such as LiNi
0.8Co
0.15Al
0.05O
2, LiVOPO
4, LiV
3O
5, LiV
3O
8, MoV
2O
8, Li
2FeSiO
4, Li
2MnSiO
4, LiFePO
4, LiFe
1/2Mn
1/2PO
4, LiMnPO
4 and Li
3V
2(PO
4)
3.
[0042] Examples of a negative electrode active material for a secondary battery are an oxide
such as Fe
2O
3, MnO, MnO
2, Mn
2O
3, Mn
3O
4, CoO, Co
3O
4, NiO, Ni
2O
3, TiO, TiO
2, SnO, SnO
2, SiO
2, RuO
2, WO, WO
2 and ZnO, metal such as Sn, Si, Al and Zn, a complex oxide such as LiVO
2, Li
3VO
4 and Li
4Ti
5O
12, and a nitride such as Li
2.6Co
0.4N, Ge
3N
4, Zn
3N
2 and Cu
3N.
[0043] As an active material in a polarizable electrode of an electric double layer capacitor,
a carbon material with a large specific surface area such as activated carbon, carbon
nanofiber, carbon nanotube, phenol resin carbide, polyvinylidene chloride carbide
and microcrystal carbon is exemplified. In a hybrid capacitor, a positive electrode
active material exemplified for a secondary battery can be used as a positive electrode.
In this case, a negative electrode is composed of a polarizable electrode using activated
carbon etc. Also, a negative electrode active material exemplified for a secondary
battery can be used as a negative electrode. In this case, a positive electrode is
composed of a polarizable electrode using activated carbon etc. As a positive electrode
active material of a redox capacitor, a metal oxide such as RuO
2, MnO
2 and NiO is exemplified, and a negative electrode is composed of an active material
such as RuO
2 and a polarizable material such as activated carbon.
[0044] There is no restriction as to the shape and particle diameter of the electrode active
material particles that are mixed with the oxidized carbon in process (A), but it
is preferable that the average particle diameter of the particles of the active material
is more than 2 µm and not more than 25 µm. The particles of the active material that
have such a relatively large diameter improve electrode density on their own, and
in the process of blending with the oxidized carbon, gelatinization of the oxidized
carbon is promoted by the compressing strength of the particles. Also, in process
(B) shown below, during the step of applying pressure to the active material layer
on the current collector, the particles of the active material that have such a relatively
large particle diameter further press the oxidized carbon, at least a part of which
is gelatinized, and make the oxidized carbon further spread in a paste-like manner,
and make the carbon denser. As a result, the electrode density further increases and
the energy density of an electric storage device further improves.
[0045] Also, it is preferable that the active material particles are composed of fine particles
with an average diameter of 0.01 to 2 µm and gross particles with an average diameter
of more than 2 µm and not more than 25 µm that are operable as an active material
of the same electrode as the fine particles. It is said that particles with a small
particle diameter easily aggregate, but the oxidized carbon is attached to and covers
the surface not only of the gross particles but also of the fine particles, so that
aggregation of the particles of the active material can be inhibited, and the blending
state of the particles of the active material and the oxidized carbon can be uniformalized.
Also, as mentioned above, the gross particles promote gelatinization and densification
of the oxidized carbon, increase the electrode density, and improve the energy density
of the electric storage device. Further, in process (B), during the step of applying
pressure to the active material layer on the current collector, the fine particles
press the oxidized carbon, at least part of which is gelatinized, and are pushed out
into and fill the gaps that are formed between the adjacent gross particles together
with the paste-like oxidized carbon, so that the electrode density further increases
and the energy density of the electric storage device further improves. It is preferable
to select gross particles and fine particles within the range of 80:20 to 95:5 by
mass, and it is more preferable to select them within the range of 90:10 to 95:5 by
mass.
[0046] The mass ratio of the electrode active material particles and the oxidized carbon
that are used in process (A) is preferably within the range of 90:10 to 99.5:0.5 and
more preferably within the range of 95:5 to 99:1 in order to obtain an electric storage
device with a high energy density. If the ratio of the oxidized carbon is lower than
the abovementioned range, the conductive property of the active material layer tends
to become insufficient, and the cycle characteristic tends to decrease because the
coverage rate of the oxidized carbon over the active material particles decreases.
Also, if the ratio of the oxidized carbon is larger than the abovementioned range,
the electrode density tends to decrease and the energy density of the electric storage
device tends to decrease.
[0047] In process (A), in addition to the electrode active material particles and the oxidized
carbon, a conductive carbon different from the oxidized carbon, a binder and a solvent
for blending can be used as needed, in order to produce an electrode material, in
which at least part of the oxidized carbon is gelatinized and attached to the surface
of the electrode active material particles. By using a solvent, an electrode material
in the form of slurry can be obtained.
[0048] For the different conductive carbon, carbon black such as Ketjen Black, furnace black,
acetylene black and channel black, fullerene, carbon nanotube, carbon nanofiber, graphene,
amorphous carbon, carbon fiber, natural graphite, artificial graphite, graphitized
Ketjen Black, mesoporous carbon, and vapor grown carbon fiber etc., which are used
in an electrode in a conventional electric storage device, can be used. The usage
of a conductive carbon that has a higher conductive property than the paste-like conductive
carbon derived from the oxidized carbon, and especially the usage of acetylene black,
is preferable. Aggregation of the different conductive carbon can be inhibited because
the oxidized carbon is attached to and covers not only the surface of the particles
of the active material, but also the surface of the different conductive carbon. Moreover,
in process (B) shown below, the energy density of the electric storage device further
improves because the different conductive carbon are pushed out into and fill the
gaps that are formed between adjacent particles together with the paste-like oxidized
carbon during the step of applying pressure to the active material layer on the current
collector and the conductive property of the whole electrode is improved. The ratio
of the oxidized carbon and the different conductive carbon is preferably within the
range of 3:1 to 1:3 by mass and more preferably within the range of 2.5:1.5 to 1.5:2.5
by mass. Moreover, in cases where the different conductive carbon is used, the ratio
of the electrode active material particles and the total amount of the different conductive
carbon and the oxidized carbon is preferably within the range of 10:90 to 0.5:99.5
by mass and more preferably within the range of 5:95 to 1:99 by mass.
[0049] As the binder, a heretofore known binder such as polytetrafluoroethylene, polyvinylidene
fluoride, tetrafluoroethylene-hexafluoropropylene copolymer, polyvinyl fluoride and
carboxymethylcellulose can be used. It is preferable that the amount of the binder
used is 1 to 30% by mass of the total amount of the electrode material. If the amount
of the binder used is 1% by mass or less, the strength of the active layer is not
sufficient, and if the amount of the binder used is 30% by mass or more, drawbacks
such as a decrease in the discharge capacity of an electrode or excessive internal
resistance arise. As the solvent for blending, a solvent such as N-methyl pyrrolidone
that does not adversely affect the other component elements in the electrode material
can be used without any restriction. There is no restriction as to the amount of the
solvent provided each component element within the mixture is evenly blended. The
binder can be used under the condition of being dissolved in the solvent.
[0050] In process (A), there is no restriction as to the method and order of blending the
electrode active material particles and the oxidized carbon, and if needed, the conductive
carbon different from the oxidized carbon, the binder and the solvent for blending.
[0051] However, if the conductive carbon different from the oxidized carbon is not used,
it is preferable to dry blend the particles of the electrode active material and the
oxidized carbon in process (A). By sufficiently kneading the obtained product with
a binder as necessary and a solvent, an electrode material in the form of slurry can
be obtained. For dry blending, a mashing machine, stone mill, ball mill, bead mill,
rod mill, roller mill, agitation mill, planetary mill, vibration mill, hybridizer,
mechanochemical composite device and jet mill can be used. Especially, it is preferable
to give a mechanochemical treatment to the active material particles and the oxidized
carbon because the coatability and the evenness of the coverage of the active material
particles by the oxidized carbon are improved. The time for dry blending can vary
according to the total amount of the active material particles and the oxidized carbon
to be blended and the blending device used, but generally it is within the range of
1 to 30 minutes. Also, there is no special restriction as to the method of kneading
with the binder and the solvent, which can be done manually with a mortar or which
can be done with a heretofore known kneading device such as a stirring machine or
a homogenizer. If each component element in the electrode material is evenly blended,
the mixing time can be short.
[0052] If the active material particles are composed of fine particles and gross particles,
and the different conductive carbon is not used, all of the fine particles, the gross
particles and the oxidized carbon can be introduced into a blending device and dry
blended in process (A). By sufficiently kneading the product obtained by dry blending
together with a binder as needed and a solvent, an electrode material in the form
of slurry can be obtained. However, it is preferable to conduct the dry blending in
the following two steps:
(A1) obtaining a preliminary mixture by dry blending the oxidized carbon and the fine
particles, and
(A2) dry blending the preliminary mixture obtained and the gross particles.
[0053] Conducting the dry blending by step (A1) and step (A2) is preferable because an electrode
material, in which the gross particles and fine particles that are covered by the
oxidized carbon are evenly blended in a highly dispersed manner, can be obtained.
Moreover, because the product obtained in step (A2) is compatible with a binder and
a solvent, an electrode material in the form of slurry, in which each component element
is evenly blended, can be easily obtained. The ratio of the fine particles and the
oxidized carbon in the step of obtaining the preliminary mixture is preferably within
the range of 70:30 to 90:10 by mass and more preferably within the range of 75:25
to 85:15.
[0054] If the conductive carbon different from the oxidized carbon is used, all of the active
material particles, the oxidized carbon and the different conductive carbon can be
introduced into a blending device and dry blended in process (A). By sufficiently
kneading the product obtained by dry blending with a binder as needed and a solvent,
an electrode material in the form of slurry can be obtained. However, it is preferable
to conduct the dry blending in the following two steps:
(AA1) dry blending the oxidized carbon and the different conductive carbon, and
(AA2) dry blending the mixture obtained in step (AA1) and the active material particles.
[0055] The mixture obtained in step (AA1) is a "conductive carbon mixture." In this step,
the oxidized carbon is attached to the surface of the different conductive carbon,
the gelatinization of the oxidized carbon partially proceeds, and the conductive carbon
mixture, in which the oxidized carbon, at least part of which is gelatinized, is attached
to the surface of the different conductive carbon, is obtained. Then, in step (AA2),
the oxidized carbon, at least part of which is gelatinized, is also attached to the
surface of the electrode active material particles, and an electrode, in which the
electrode active material particles and the different conductive carbon which are
covered with the oxidized carbon are evenly blended in a highly dispersed manner,
is obtained. Also, because this conductive carbon mixture is compatible with a binder
and a solvent, one of the following steps can be conducted instead of step (AA2) and
the subsequent kneading with a binder and a solvent in order to obtain an electrode
material in the form of slurry:
(aa1) wet blending the conductive carbon mixture, the active material particles, the
binder and the solvent, or
(aa2) wet blending the conductive carbon mixture, the binder and the solvent, further
adding the active material particles and wet blending, or
(aa3) wet blending the conductive carbon mixture, the active material particles and
the solvent, further adding the binder and wet blending.
[0056] Fine carbon particles are said to be poorly compatible with a binder and a solvent,
but by using the conductive carbon mixture, an electrode material in which each component
is evenly blended can be easily obtained regardless of the blending method of this
mixture and the electrode active material particles. Also, various production lines
can be established if the conductive carbon mixture is prepared previously because
the subsequent blending of the active material particles and the binder can be conducted
by both wet blending and dry blending.
[0057] Also, if the active material particles are composed of fine particles and gross particles,
and the different conductive carbon is used, all of the fine particles, the gross
particles, the oxidized carbon and the different conductive carbon can be introduced
into a blending device and dry blended in process (A). An electrode material in the
form of slurry can be obtained by sufficiently kneading the product obtained by dry
blending with a binder as needed and a solvent. However, it is preferable to conduct
the dry blending in the following steps:
(AB1) dry blending the oxidized carbon and the different conductive carbon,
(AB2) dry blending the mixture obtained in step (AB1) and the fine particles, and
(AB3) dry blending the mixture obtained in step (AB2) and the gross particles.
It is also preferable to conduct the dry blending in the following steps:
(AC1) dry blending the oxidized carbon and the fine particles,
(AC2) dry blending the mixture obtained in step (AC1) and the different conductive
carbon, and
(AC3) dry blending the mixture obtained in step (AC2) and the gross particles.
[0058] In these methods, at least in one of steps (AB1), (AB2), (AC1) and (AC2), the oxidized
carbon is attached to the surface of the fine particles or the different conductive
carbon, and the gelatinization of the oxidized carbon partially proceeds, and therefore
a mixture in which the oxidized carbon, the gross particles, the fine particles and
the different carbon are evenly blended in a highly dispersed manner can be obtained.
Also, because the conductive carbon mixture obtained in step (AB1) is compatible with
a binder and a solvent as mentioned above, one of the following steps can be conducted
in order to obtain an electrode material in the form of slurry instead of step (AB2),
step (AB3) and the subsequent kneading with a binder and a solvent:
(ab1) wet blending the conductive carbon mixture, the fine particles, the gross particles,
the binder and the solvent, or
(ab2) wet blending the conductive carbon mixture, the binder and the solvent, further
adding the fine particles and the gross particles and wet blending, or
(ab3) wet blending the conductive carbon mixture, the fine particles, the gross particles
and the solvent, further adding the binder and wet blending.
[0059] In cases where process (A) is conducted by using these methods, the amount of the
different conductive carbon used is chosen so that the ratio of the fine particles
and the total amount of the oxidized carbon and the different conductive carbon is
within the range of 70:30 to 90:10 by mass and preferably within the range of 75:25
to 85:15 by mass.
[0060] In process (B), an active material layer is formed by applying the electrode material
obtained in process (A) onto a current collector to constitute a positive electrode
or negative electrode of an electric storage device, this active material layer is
dried as necessary, pressure is applied to the active material layer by rolling treatment,
and an electrode is obtained. The rolling treatment can be given after the electrode
material obtained in process (A) has been shaped into a predefined form and press-fitted
onto the current collector.
[0061] In process (B), as pressure is applied to the active material layer, the oxidized
carbon at least part of which is gelatinized further spreads and has become dense
while covering the surface of the active material particles, the active material particles
approach each other, and accordingly the paste-like oxidized carbon is pushed out
not only into the gaps formed between the adjacent particles of the active material,
but also into the pores that exist on the surface of the particles of the active material,
and densely fills the gaps and pores while covering the surface of the particles of
the active material. Therefore, the amount of the active material per unit volume
in the electrode is increased and the electrode density is increased. Moreover, the
paste-like oxidized carbon that is densely filled has a sufficient conductive property
to serve as a conductive agent.
[0062] As the current collector for an electrode of an electric storage device, an electroconductive
material such as platinum, gold, nickel, aluminum, titanium, steel and carbon can
be used. For the form of the current collector, any form such as a film, foil, plate,
net, expanded metal, or cylinder can be adopted. To dry the active material layer,
the solvent can be removed, if needed, by heating under reduced pressure. The pressure
applied to the active material layer by rolling treatment is generally within the
range of 50,000 to 1,000,000 N/cm
2 and preferably within the range of 100,000 to 500,000 N/cm
2. Also, there is no special restriction as to the temperature of the rolling treatment,
and the rolling treatment can be given at a normal temperature or under a heating
condition.
[0063] In the electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention, the paste-like
conductive carbon in the active material layer also exists inside the gaps formed
between the adjacent particles of the electrode active material and/or the pores that
exist on the surface of the particles of the electrode active material. Therefore,
the coverage of the surface of the particles of the active material by the paste-like
conductive carbon is increased, the conductive property of the entire active material
layer is improved and the electrode density is also improved. Conductive carbon such
as carbon black, natural graphite and carbon nanotube, which are used as a conductive
agent in an electrode of a conventional electric storage device, can hardly intrude
into gaps or pores of such narrow width.
[0064] It has been found that, although the electrode obtained by the method according to
the present invention has the active material layer comprising the paste-like conductive
carbon that is densely filled, impregnation of an electrolytic solution in an electric
storage device into the electrode is not inhibited. In a preferred embodiment of the
electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention, the measurement
of pore distribution in the active material layer of the electrode by the mercury
intrusion method reveals that the active material layer has pores with a diameter
of 5 to 40 nm. These fine pores, which are considered to be mainly pores in the paste-like
conductive carbon that is derived from the oxidized carbon and that has become dense,
are large enough to allow an electrolytic solution in an electric storage device to
pass through the paste-like conductive carbon to the particles of the active material.
Therefore, the paste-like conductive carbon in the electrode has a sufficient conductive
property and does not inhibit the impregnation of the electrolytic solution in the
electric storage device. As a result, the energy density of the electric storage device
is improved.
[0065] Moreover, it has been found that, probably because the surface of the particles of
the active material in the active material layer of the electrode obtained by the
method according to the present invention is covered by the dense oxidized carbon
that spreads in a paste-like manner up to the inside of the pores that exist on the
surface of the particles of the active material, dissolution of the active material
in the electrolytic solution is inhibited and the cycle characteristic of the electric
storage device is improved although the impregnation of the electrolytic solution
in the electric storage device into the electrode is not inhibited. In a preferred
embodiment of the electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention,
the amount of dissolution of the active material is decreased by as much as 40 % or
more compared with when an electrode is composed of a conventional conductive agent
such as acetylene black and the particles of the active material. Moreover, because
the dissolution of the active material is significantly inhibited, the cycle characteristic
of the electric storage device is significantly improved.
[0066] Especially, the oxidized carbon with a hydrophilic part that account for 10 % by
mass or more of the whole oxidized carbon is likely to be integrally compressed and
spread in a paste-like manner when pressure is applied, cover most or all of the surface
of the particles of the active material up to the inside of the pores that exist on
the surface of the particles of the active material, and become dense. As a result,
an electrode, in which 80 % or more, preferably 90 % or more and especially preferably
95 % or more of the surface of the particles of the active material in the active
material layer of the electrode contacts the paste-like conductive carbon that is
derived from the oxidized carbon and has become dense, is obtained.
(3) Electric storage device
[0067] The electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention is used for
an electrode of an electric storage device such as a secondary battery, an electric
double layer capacitor, a redox capacitor and a hybrid capacitor. The electric storage
device comprises a pair of electrodes (positive electrode and negative electrode)
and an electrolyte that is placed therebetween as essential components. At least either
of the positive electrode or the negative electrode is produced by the method of producing
in the present invention.
[0068] The electrolyte that is placed between a positive electrode and a negative electrode
in an electric storage device can be an electrolytic solution that is held by a separator,
a solid electrolyte, or a gel electrolyte, that is, an electrolyte that is used in
a conventional electric storage device can be used without any restrictions. Representative
electrolytes are as follows. For a lithium ion secondary battery, an electrolytic
solution in which a lithium salt such as LiPF
6, LiBF
4, LiCF
3SO
3 and LiN(CF
3SO
2)
2 is dissolved in a solvent such as ethylene carbonate, propylene carbonate, butylene
carbonate and dimethylcarbonate can be used and held by a separator such as polyolefin
fiber nonwoven fabric and glass fiber nonwoven fabric. Further, an inorganic solid
electrolyte such as Li
5La
3Nb
2O
12, Li
1.5Al
0.5Ti
1.5(PO
4)
3, Li
7La
3Zr
2O
12 and Li
7P
3S
11, an organic solid electrolyte that is composed of a complex of a lithium salt and
a macromolecule compound such as polyethylene oxide, polymethacrylate and polyacrylate,
and a gel electrolyte in which an electrolytic solution is absorbed into polyvinylidene
fluoride and polyacrylonitrile etc. are also used. For an electric double layer capacitor
and a redox capacitor, an electrolytic solution in which a quaternary ammonium salt
such as (C
2H
5)
4NBF
4 is dissolved in a solvent such as acrylonitrile and propylene carbonate is used.
For a hybrid capacitor, an electrolytic solution in which a lithium salt is dissolved
in propylene carbonate etc. or an electrolytic solution in which a quaternary ammonium
salt is dissolved into propylene carbonate etc. is used.
[0069] However, if a solid electrolyte or a gel-like electrolyte is used as the electrolyte
between a positive electrode and a negative electrode, an electrode material is prepared
by adding a solid electrolyte to each of the abovementioned component elements in
the abovementioned process (A) for the purpose of securing an ion conduction path
in the active material layer.
EXAMPLES
[0070] The present invention is explained in the following examples, though the present
invention is not limited to the following examples.
(1) Production of oxidized carbon and electrode
Example 1
[0071] Ketjen Black (trade name: EC300J, manufacturer: Ketjen Black International Co., the
BET specific surface area: 800m
2/g) weighing10 g was added to 300 mL of 60% nitric acid and then the fluid obtained
was irradiated by an ultrasonic wave for 10 minutes, and then the fluid was filtered
and the Ketjen Black was retrieved. The retrieved Ketjen Black was washed with water
three times and then dried, so that acid-treated Ketjen Black was obtained. Then,
0.5g of the acid-treated Ketjen Black obtained was mixed with 1.98 g Fe(CH
3COO)
2, 0.77 g Li(CH
3COO), 1.10 g C
6H
8O
7•H
2O, 1.32 g CH
3COOH, 1.31 g H
3PO
4, and 120 mL distilled water, and the mixed fluid obtained was agitated by a stirrer
for 1 hour, and then the mixed fluid was evaporated, dried and solidified at 100°C
in air and a mixture was collected. Then, the mixture obtained was introduced into
a vibratory ball mill device and pulverization was conducted at 20 hz for 10 minutes.
The powder obtained by pulverization was heated at 700°C for 3 minutes in nitrogen,
and a complex in which LiFePO
4 was supported by Ketjen Black was obtained.
[0072] 1g of the complex obtained was added to 100 mL of 30% hydrochloric acid aqueous solution,
then the LiFePO
4 in the complex was dissolved by irradiating the fluid obtained with an ultrasonic
wave for 15 minutes, and the remaining solid matter was filtered, washed with water
and dried. A part of the solid matter after drying was heated to 900°C in air and
its weight loss was measured by TG analysis. Until it was confirmed that the weight
loss was 100%, that is, no LiFePO
4 remained, the abovementioned process of dissolving LiFePO
4 in the hydrochloric acid aqueous solution, filtering, washing with water and drying
was repeated, so that an oxidized carbon that did not contain any LiFePO
4 was obtained.
[0073] Then, 0.1 g of the oxidized carbon obtained was added to 20 ml of ammonia solution
with pH 11, and ultrasonic irradiation was conducted for 1 minute. The fluid obtained
was left for 5 hours and a solid phase area was precipitated. After the precipitation
of the solid phase area, the supernatant fluid was removed, the remaining part was
dried, and the weight of the solid object after drying was measured. By subtracting
the weight of the solid object after drying from the weight of the initial oxidized
carbon (0.1 g) and calculating the weight ratio of the subtracted result against the
initial weight of the oxidized carbon (0.1 g), the contained amount of the "hydrophilic
part" in the oxidized carbon was evaluated.
[0074] Fe(CH
3COO)
2, Li(CH
3COO), C
6H
8O
7•H
2O, CH
3COOH and H
3PO
4 were introduced into distilled water, and the compound fluid obtained was agitated
by a stirrer for 1 hour, and then the compound fluid was evaporated, dried and solidified
at 100°C in air and then heated at 700°C for 3 minutes in nitrogen, and LiFePO
4 fine particles with an initial particle diameter of 100 nm (the average particle
diameter: 100 nm) were obtained. Then, commercially available LiFePO
4 gross particles (initial particle diameter: 0.5 to 1 µm, secondary particle diameter:
2 to 3 µm, the average particle diameter: 2.5 µm), the fine particles obtained and
the oxidized carbon were mixed at the ratio of 90:9:1, and an electrode material was
obtained. Then, 5% by mass of the total mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate
quantity of N-methyl pyrrolidone were added to the electrode material and kneaded
sufficiently so that a slurry was formed, and this slurry was coated on an aluminum
foil, dried and then given a rolling treatment, and an electrode with an active material
layer was obtained. The electrode density of the electrode was calculated from the
measured values of the volume and weight of the active material layer on the aluminum
foil in the electrode.
Example 2
[0075] The procedure of Example 1 was repeated except that the process in which 0.5 g the
acid-treated Ketjen Black, 1.98 g Fe(CH
3COO)
2, 0.77 g Li(CH
3COO), 1.10 g C
6H
8O
7•H
2O, 1.32 g CH
3COOH, 1.31 g H
3PO
4 and 120 mL distilled water were mixed was changed into a process in which 1.8 g the
acid-treated Ketjen Black, 0.5 g Fe(CH
3COO)
2, 0.19 g Li(CH
3COO), 0.28 g C
6H
8O
7•H
2O, 0.33 g CH
3COOH, 0.33 g H
3PO
4 and 250 mL distilled water were mixed.
Example 3
[0076] 10g of Ketjen Black used in Example 1 was added to 300 mL of 40% nitric acid and
then the fluid obtained was irradiated by an ultrasonic wave for 10 minutes, and then
the fluid was filtered and the Ketjen Black was retrieved. The retrieved Ketjen Black
was washed with water three times and then dried, so that acid-treated Ketjen Black
was obtained. Then, the procedure of Example 2 was repeated except that this acid-treated
Ketjen Black 1.8 g was used instead of the acid-treated Ketjen Black 1.8 g used in
Example 2.
Comparative Example 1
[0077] 10g of Ketjen Black used in Example 1 was added to 300 mL of 60% nitric acid and
then the fluid obtained was irradiated by an ultrasonic wave for 1 hour, and then
the fluid was filtered and the Ketjen Black was retrieved. The retrieved Ketjen Black
was washed with water three times and then dried, so that acid-treated Ketjen Black
was obtained. This acid-treated Ketjen Black was heated at 700°C for 3 minutes in
nitrogen. For the oxidized carbon obtained, the contained amount of the hydrophilic
part was measured by using the same procedure as the procedure in Example 1. Also,
using the oxidized carbon obtained, an electrode containing LiFePO
4 was produced by using the same procedure as the procedure in Example 1 and its electrode
density was calculated.
Comparative Example 2
[0078] 10 g of Ketjen Black used in Example 1 was added to 300 mL of 30% nitric acid and
then the fluid obtained was irradiated by an ultrasonic wave for 10 minutes, and then
the fluid was filtered and the Ketjen Black was retrieved. The retrieved Ketjen Black
was washed with water three times and then dried, so that acid-treated Ketjen Black
was obtained. Then, without pulverization by vibratory ball mill, it was heated at
700°C for 3 minutes in nitrogen. For the oxidized carbon obtained, the contained amount
of the hydrophilic part was measured by using the same procedure as the procedure
in Example 1. Also, using the oxidized carbon obtained, an electrode containing LiFePO
4 was produced by using the same procedure as the procedure in Example 1 and its electrode
density was calculated.
Comparative Example 3
[0079] To confirm the contribution of the hydrophilic part to electrode density, 40 mg of
the oxidized carbon of Example 1 was added to 40 mL of pure water, ultrasonic irradiation
was applied for 30 minutes to disperse the carbon in the pure water, then the dispersion
was left for 30 minutes, after which the supernatant fluid was removed, then the remaining
part was dried, and a solid object was obtained. For this solid object, the contained
amount of the hydrophilic part was measured by using the same procedure as the procedure
in Example 1. Also, using the solid object obtained, an electrode containing LiFePO
4 was produced by using the same procedure as the procedure in Example 1 and its electrode
density was calculated.
Comparative Example 4
[0080] For the Ketjen Black raw material used in Example 1, the contained amount of the
hydrophilic part was measured by using the same procedure as the procedure in Example
1. Also, using the Ketjen Black raw material, an electrode containing LiFePO
4 was produced by using the same procedure as the procedure in Example 1 and its electrode
density was calculated.
[0081] Figure 1 is a graph that shows the relationship between the contained amounts of
the hydrophilic part in the carbons of Examples 1 to 3 and Comparative Examples 1
to 4 and the electrode densities of the electrodes of Examples 1 to 3 and Comparative
Examples 1 to 4. As is evident from Figure 1, if the contained amount of the hydrophilic
part exceeds 8% by mass of the entire oxidized carbon, the electrode density begins
to increase, and if it exceeds 9% by mass of the entire oxidized carbon, the electrode
density begins to increase sharply, and if the contained amount of the hydrophilic
part exceeds 10% by mass of the entire oxidized carbon, the high electrode density
of 2.6 g/cc or more can be obtained. Also, as is evident from the comparison of the
result for Example 1 and the result for Comparative Example 3, the hydrophilic part
of the oxidized carbon largely contributes to the improvement of electrode density.
Also, based on the observation of SEM images it was confirmed that the gelatinization
of the oxidized carbon rapidly progresses as the contained amount of the hydrophilic
part of the oxidized carbon is increased and the electrode density begins to increase
rapidly.
(3) Evaluation as a lithium ion secondary battery
(i) Active material: LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2
Example 4
[0082] Li
2CO
3, Ni(CH
3COO)
2, Mn(CH
3COO)
2 and Co(CH
3COO)
2 were introduced into distilled water, the compound fluid obtained was agitated by
a stirrer for 1 hour, and then the compound fluid was evaporated, dried and solidified
at 100°C in air, mixed by using a ball mill, and then heated at 800°C in air for 10
minutes, and LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 fine particles with an average diameter of 0.5 µm were obtained. These fine particles
and the oxidized carbon in Example 1 were mixed at the ratio by mass of 90:10 and
a preliminary compound was obtained. Then, 86% by mass of commercially available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 gross particles (average diameter: 5 µm), 9% by mass of the abovementioned preliminary
compound and 2% by mass of acetylene black (primary particle diameter: 40 nm) were
mixed, and then 3% by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate quantity of
N-methyl pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that a slurry was formed,
and this slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given a rolling treatment,
and a positive electrode with an active material layer for a lithium ion secondary
battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive electrode was calculated
from the measured values of the volume and weight of the active material layer on
the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of the electrode density was
4.00 g/cc. Further, using the positive electrode obtained, a lithium ion secondary
battery was manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
Example 5
[0083] 94% by mass of commercially available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 particles (average diameter: 5 µm), 2% by mass of the oxidized carbon of Example
1 and 2% by mass of acetylene black (primary particle diameter: 40 nm) were mixed,
and then 2% by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate quantity of N-methyl
pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that a slurry was formed, and this
slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given a rolling treatment, and
a positive electrode with an active material layer for a lithium ion secondary battery
was obtained. The electrode density of the positive electrode was calculated from
the measured values of the volume and weight of the active material layer on the aluminum
foil in the positive electrode. The value of the electrode density was 3.81 g/cc.
Further, using the positive electrode obtained, a lithium ion secondary battery was
manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
Comparative Example 5
[0084] 94% by mass of commercially available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 particles (average diameter: 5 µm) and 4% by mass of acetylene black (primary particle
diameter: 40 nm) were mixed, and then 2% by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an
adequate quantity of N-methyl pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that
a slurry was formed, and this slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then
given a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material layer
for a lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive
electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight of the
active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of
the electrode density was 3.40 g/cc. Further, using the positive electrode obtained,
a lithium ion secondary battery was manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
[0085] Figure 2 shows SEM images of the cross-section of the positive electrode of the lithium
ion secondary battery of Example 5 and Figure 3 shows SEM images of the cross-section
of the positive electrode of the lithium ion secondary battery of Comparative Example
5. In both figures, (A) is an image at a magnification of 1,500 and (B) is an image
at a magnification of 25,000. In Figure 2(A) and Figure 3(A), the thickness of the
active material layer is shown as t. It can be seen that the active material layer
in the lithium ion secondary battery of Example 5 is thinner than the active material
layer in the lithium ion secondary battery of Comparative Example 5, even though the
contained amount of the particles of the active material and the contained amount
of carbon in the active material layer are the same. Also, from the comparison of
Figure 2(A) and Figure 3(A), it was found that, in the active material layer of the
lithium ion secondary battery of Example 5, the particles of the active material approach
each other and the ratio of the area occupied by carbon to the area of the entire
active material layer in the image is small. Further, the forms of carbon in Figure
2(B) and Figure 3(B) are remarkably different. In the active material layer of the
lithium ion secondary battery of Comparative Example 5 (Figure 3(B)), the grain boundaries
of carbon (acetylene black) primary particles are clear and there are large gaps adjacent
to the surface boundary between the particles of the active material and the carbon
particles, especially adjacent to the pores formed on the surface of the particles
of the active material, in addition to the gaps between the carbon particles, whereas
in the active material layer of the lithium ion secondary battery of Example 5 (Figure
2(B)), the grain boundaries of carbon primary particles are not discernible, the carbon
is paste-like and this paste-like carbon intrudes into the deep parts of the pores
of the particles of the active material that have a width of 50 nm or less (ie. gaps
between the primary particles), and gaps are virtually absent. Moreover, it is shown
that 90% or more of the surface of the particles of the active material contact the
paste-like carbon. It is assured that the difference between the electrode densities
in the positive electrodes of the lithium ion secondary batteries in Example 5 and
Comparative Example 5 is derived from the above-described difference in the forms
of carbon.
[0086] As mentioned above, because the active material layer in Example 5 is thinner than
the active material layer in Comparative Example 5, it is assured that the material
filling rate in the former is large, and the material filling rate was confirmed in
the following formulae. The theoretical electrode density refers to the electrode
density when gaps in the active material layer are assumed to be 0%.

where:
a : % by mass of the active material against the entire active material layer
b : % by mass of carbon against the entire active material layer
100-a-b : % by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride against the entire active material
layer
X : true density of the active material
Y : true density of carbon black
Z : true density of polyvinylidene fluoride
[0087] As a result, the material filling rate of the active material layer in Example 5
was 86.8% and the material filling rate of the active material layer in Comparative
Example 5 was 79.1%; in the electrode containing the paste-like conductive carbon
derived from the oxidized carbon, an improvement in the filling rate of as much as
7.7% was observed.
[0088] Figure 4 shows the result of the measurement of the pore distribution in the active
material layer of Example 5 and the active material layer of Comparative Example 5
by the mercury intrusion method. The result shows that, in the active material layer
in Comparative Example 5, pores with a diameter of 20 nm or less are virtually absent,
and most of the pores show peaks at the diameter of approximately 30 nm, the diameter
of approximately 40 nm, and the diameter of approximately 150 nm. Presumably, the
pores that show a peak at the diameter of approximately 150 nm are pores that are
mainly attributable to the particles of an active material and the pores that show
peaks at the diameter of approximately 30 nm and the diameter of approximately 40
nm are the pores that are mainly found between particles of acetylene black. On the
other hand, it is assured that, in the active material layer in Example 5, the number
of pores with a diameter of approximately 100 nm or more among the pores in the active
material layer in Comparative Example 5 is decreased, and instead the number of pores
with a diameter within the range of 5 to 40 nm is increased. It is considered that
the decrease in the number of pores with a diameter of approximately 100 nm or more
is because the pores of the particles of the active material are covered with the
paste-like conductive carbon. Moreover, the pores with a diameter within the range
of 5 to 40 nm, which are presumably pores in the dense, paste-like conductive carbon
that is derived from the oxidized carbon, are of a sufficiently large size to allow
for the electrolytic solution in an electric storage device to go through the paste-like
conductive carbon to contact the active material particles. Therefore, it is concluded
that the paste-like conductive carbon in the electrode does not inhibit the impregnation
of the electrolytic solution in the electric storage device.
[0089] Figure 5 is a graph that shows the relationship between the rate and the discharge
capacity per volume of the positive electrode active material layer in the lithium
ion secondary batteries of Example 4, Example 5 and Comparative Example 5. The lithium
ion secondary battery of Example 5 shows a higher capacity than the lithium ion secondary
battery of Comparative Example 5, and the lithium ion secondary battery of Example
4 shows a higher capacity than the lithium ion secondary battery of Example 5. That
is, as the electrode density of the positive electrode increases, the discharge capacity
per volume also increases. Also, these secondary batteries show almost the same rate
characteristics. This reveals that the paste-like conductive carbons contained in
the active material layers in the secondary batteries of Example 4 and Example 5,
which are derived from the oxidized carbon and have become dense, have sufficient
electroconductivity to serve as a conductive agent and do not inhibit the impregnation
of the electrolytic solution in the secondary battery. Also, the positive electrode
of the secondary battery in Example 4 shows a higher electrode density than the positive
electrode of the secondary battery in Example 5, even though the contained amount
of the particles of the active material and the contained amount of carbon in the
active material layer are almost the same, which is presumably because the fine particles
are pushed out into and fill the gaps formed between the adjacent gross particles
together with the past-like oxidized carbon of Example 1 while pressing the oxidized
carbon.
[0090] For the lithium secondary batteries of Example 5 and Comparative Example 5, charging/discharging
was repeated within the range of 4.6 to 3.0 V under the condition of 60°C and the
charging/discharging rate of 0.5 C. Figure 6 shows the result of the cycling characteristics
obtained. The result shows that the secondary battery of Example 5 has better cycle
characteristics than the secondary battery of Comparative Example 5. From a comparison
of Figure 2 and Figure 3, it is considered that this is because almost all of the
surface of the particles of the active material in the active material layer in Example
5 is covered with the dense paste-like carbon up to the point of the depth of the
pores on the surface of the particles of the active material and that this paste-like
carbon inhibits the degradation of the active material.
(ii) Active material: LiCoO2
Example 6
[0091] Li
2CO
3, Co(CH
3COO)
2 and C
6H
8O
7•H
2O were introduced into distilled water, the compound fluid obtained was agitated by
a stirrer for 1 hour, and then the compound fluid was evaporated, dried and solidified
at 100°C in air and was then heated at 800°C in air for 10 minutes, and LiCoO
2 fine particles with an average diameter of 0.5 µm were obtained. These fine particles
and the oxidized carbon obtained in Example 1 were mixed at the mass ratio of 90:10,
and a preliminary mixture was obtained. Then, 86% by mass of the total mass of commercially
available LiCoO
2 gross particles (average particle diameter: 10 µm), 9% by mass of the preliminary
mixture and 2 % by mass of acetylene black (primary particle diameter: 40 nm) were
mixed, and then 3 % by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate quantity of
N-methyl pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that a slurry was formed,
and this slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given a rolling treatment,
and a positive electrode with an active material layer for a lithium ion secondary
battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive electrode was calculated
from the measured values of the volume and weight of the active material layer on
the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of the electrode density was
4.25 g/cc. Further, using the positive electrode obtained, a lithium ion secondary
battery was manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
Example 7
[0092] 94% by mass of commercially available LiCoO
2 particles (average diameter: 10 µm), 2% by mass of the oxidized carbon of Example
1 and 2% by mass of acetylene black (primary particle diameter: 40 nm) were mixed,
and then 2% by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate quantity of N-methyl
pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that a slurry was formed, and this
slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given a rolling treatment, and
a positive electrode with an active material layer for a lithium ion secondary battery
was obtained. The electrode density of the positive electrode was calculated from
the measured values of the volume and weight of the active material layer on the aluminum
foil in the positive electrode. The value of the electrode density was 4.05 g/cc.
Further, using the positive electrode obtained, a lithium ion secondary battery was
manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
Comparative Example 6
[0093] 94% by mass of commercially available LiCoO
2 particles (average diameter: 10 µm) and 4% by mass of acetylene black (primary particle
diameter: 40 nm) were mixed, and then 2% by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an
adequate quantity of N-methyl pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that
a slurry was formed, and this slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then
given a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material layer
for a lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive
electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight of the
active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of
the electrode density was 3.60 g/cc. Further, using the positive electrode obtained,
a lithium ion secondary battery was manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
[0094] For the active material layer in Example 7 and the active material layer in Comparative
Example 6, the material filling rates were confirmed by using the abovementioned formulae
(I) and (II). As a result, the material filling rate of the active material layer
in Example 7 was 85.6 % and the material filling rate of the active material layer
in Comparative Example 6 was 79.1 %; in the electrode containing the paste-like conductive
carbon derived from the oxidized carbon, an improvement in the filling rate of as
much as 6.5 % was observed.
[0095] Figure 7 is a graph that shows the relationship between the rate and the discharge
capacity per volume of the positive electrode active material layer in the lithium
ion secondary batteries of Example 6, Example 7 and Comparative Example 6. In line
with the result shown in Figure 5, Figure 7 shows that the discharging capacity increases
as the electrode density increases and almost the same rate characteristics are obtained.
For the lithium ion secondary batteries of Example 7 and Comparative Example 6, charging/discharging
was repeated within the range of 4.3 to 3.0 V under the condition of 60 °C and the
charging/discharging rate of 0.5 C. Figure 8 shows the result of the cycling characteristics
obtained. In line with the result shown in Figure 6, Figure 8 shows that the secondary
battery of Example 7 has better cycle characteristics than the secondary battery of
Comparative Example 6.
(iii) Active material: Li1.2Mn0.56Ni0.17Co0.07O2
Example 8
[0096] 1.66 g Li (CH
3COO), 2.75 g Mn(CH
3COO)
2•4H
2O, 0.85 g Ni(CH
3COO)
2•4H
2O, 0.35 g Co(CH
3COO)
2•4H
2O and 200 mL distilled water were mixed, solvent was removed by using the evaporator,
and a mixture was collected. Then, the mixture collected was introduced into a vibratory
ball mill device, pulverization at 15 hz was conducted for 10 minutes, and an even
mixture was obtained. The mixture after pulverization was heated at 900 °C in air
for 1 hour and crystals of a lithium excess solid solution Li
1.2Mn
0.56Ni
0.17Co
0.07O
2 with an average particle diameter of 1 µm or less were obtained. 91 % by mass of
these crystal particles and 4 % by mass of the oxidized carbon of Example 1 were mixed,
and then 5% by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate quantity of N-methyl
pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that a slurry was formed, and this
slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given a rolling treatment, and
a positive electrode with an active material layer for a lithium ion secondary battery
was obtained. The electrode density of the positive electrode was calculated from
the measured values of the volume and weight of the active material layer on the aluminum
foil in the positive electrode. The value of the electrode density was 3.15 g/cc.
Further, using the positive electrode obtained, a lithium ion secondary battery was
manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
Comparative Example 7
[0097] 91% by mass of Li
1.2Mn
0.56 Ni
0.17 Co
0.07O
2 particles that were obtained in Example 8 and 4% by mass of acetylene black (primary
particle diameter: 40 nm) were mixed, and then 5% by mass of polyvinylidene fluoride
and an adequate quantity of N-methyl pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently
so that a slurry was formed, and this slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried
and then given a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material
layer for a lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the
positive electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight
of the active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value
of the electrode density was 2.95 g/cc. Further, using the positive electrode obtained,
a lithium ion secondary battery was manufactured in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. Charging/discharging
characteristics of the lithium ion secondary battery obtained were measured for a
broad range of current densities.
[0098] Figure 9 is a graph that shows the relationship between the rate and the discharge
capacity per volume of the positive electrode active material layer in the lithium
ion secondary batteries of Example 8 and Comparative Example 7. In line with the result
shown in Figure 5, Figure 9 shows that the discharging capacity increases as the electrode
density increases and almost the same rate characteristics are obtained. For the lithium
ion secondary batteries of Example 8 and Comparative Example 7, charging/discharging
was repeated within the range of 4.8 to 2.5 V under the condition of 25 °C and the
charging/discharging rate of 0.5 C. Figure 10 shows the result of the cycling characteristics
obtained. As with the result shown in Figure 6, Figure 10 shows that the secondary
battery of Example 8 has better cycle characteristics than the secondary battery of
Comparative Example 7.
(iv) Change of oxidized carbon
Example 9
[0099] 10 g of furnace black with pores (average primary particle diameter: 20 nm, the BET
specific surface area: 1400 m
2/g) was added to 300 mL of 60% nitric acid, an ultrasonic wave was irradiated for
10 minutes into the fluid obtained, and the fluid was filtrated and the furnace black
was retrieved. The retrieved furnace black was washed with water three times and then
dried, so that acid-treated furnace black was obtained. 0.5 g of this acid-treated
furnace black, 1.98 g Fe(CH
3COO)
2, 0.77 g Li(CH
3COO), 1.10 g C
6H
8O
7•H
2O, 1.32 g CH
3COOH, 1.31 g H
3PO
4, and 120 mL distilled water were mixed. The compound fluid obtained was agitated
for 1 hour by a stirrer, and then the compound fluid was evaporated, dried and solidified
at 100°C in air, and a mixture was collected. Then, the mixture obtained was introduced
into a vibratory ball mill device and pulverization was conducted at 20 hz for 10
minutes. The powder after pulverization was heated at 700°C for 3 minutes in nitrogen,
and a complex in which LiFePO
4 was supported by the furnace black was obtained.
[0100] 1 g of the complex obtained was added to 100 mL of 30% hydrochloric acid solution,
and LiFePO
4 in the complex was dissolved while the fluid obtained was irradiated by an ultrasonic
wave for 15 minutes, and then the remaining solid body was filtered, washed by water,
and dried. A part of the solid body after drying was heated to 900 °C in air and weight
loss was measured by TG analysis. The process of dissolution of LiFePO
4 by the aforementioned hydrochloric acid solution, filtration, water washing and drying
was repeated until it was confirmed that weight loss was 100%, that is, no LiFePO
4 remained, so that a oxidized carbon that did not contain any LiFePO
4 was obtained.
[0101] Then, 0.1 g of the oxidized carbon obtained was added to 20 mL of ammonia solution
with pH 11, and ultrasonic irradiation was applied for 1 minute. The fluid obtained
was left for 5 hours and a solid phase area was precipitated. After the precipitation
of the solid phase area, the supernatant fluid was removed, the remaining part was
dried, and the weight of the solid object after drying was measured. By subtracting
the weight of the solid object after drying from the weight of the initial oxidized
carbon (0.1 g) and calculating the weight ratio of the subtracted result against the
initial weight of the oxidized carbon (0.1 g), the contained amount of the "hydrophilic
part" in the oxidized carbon was evaluated. This oxidized carbon contained 13% of
hydrophilic part. The contained amount of the hydrophilic part in the furnace black
with pores, which was used as a raw material, was only 2%.
[0102] 94% by mass of commercially available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 particles (average diameter: 5 µm), 2 % by mass of the oxidized carbon obtained,
and 2% by mass of acetylene black (primary particle diameter: 40 nm) were mixed. Figure
11 shows an SEM image of the mixture obtained at a magnification of 50,000. The surface
of the particles is partly covered with a paste-like material and their outline form
is not clearly identifiable; this paste-like material is the oxidized carbon that
is obtained by oxidizing the furnace black raw material, which spreads while covering
the surface of the particles due to the pressure during mixing. Also, it can be observed
that acetylene black with an average primary particle diameter 40 nm is well dispersed.
It is generally said that fine particles easily aggregate, but by virtue of the oxidized
carbon, aggregation of the fine particles is effectively inhibited.
[0103] Then, 2% by mass of the total mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate quantity
of N-methyl pyrrolidone were added to the mixture obtained and kneaded sufficiently
so that a slurry was formed, and this slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried
and then given a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material
layer for a lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the
positive electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight
of the active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value
of the electrode density was 3.80 g/cc. Further, using the positive electrode obtained,
a lithium ion secondary battery was manufactured in which a solution of 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. For the battery obtained,
charging/discharging characteristics were evaluated for a broad range of current densities.
Also, charging/discharging was repeated within the range of 4.6 to 3.0 V under the
condition of 60 °C and the charging/discharging rate of 0.5 C.
[0104] Example 9 and Comparative Example 5 are different in terms of the kind of carbon
used for a positive electrode, but otherwise the same. In Example 9, the oxidized
carbon obtained from a furnace black raw material with pores and acetylene black were
used, whereas in Comparative Example 5, only acetylene black was used. The electrode
density of the positive electrode in Comparative Example 5 was 3.40 g/cc, so the electrode
density was significantly improved by using the oxidized carbon. Example 9 and Example
5 are also different in terms of the kind of oxidized carbon used for a positive electrode,
but otherwise the same. In Example 5, the oxidized carbon that was obtained from the
Ketjen Black raw material was used, whereas in Example 9, the oxidized carbon obtained
from the furnace black raw material was used. The electrode density of the positive
electrode in Example 5 was 3.81 g/cc, so almost the same electrode density was obtained
notwithstanding the difference in the raw materials in the oxidized carbon.
[0105] Figure 12 shows the relationship between the rate and the discharge capacity per
volume of the positive electrode active material layer of the lithium ion secondary
batteries in Example 9 and Comparative Example 5, and Figure 13 shows the result of
the cycling characteristics of the lithium ion secondary batteries in Example 9 and
Comparative Example 5. Figure 12 shows that the discharge capacity increases as the
electrode density increases and almost the same rate characteristics are obtained.
Also, comparison of the rate characteristics of the secondary battery of Example 5
in Figure 5 and the rate characteristics of the secondary battery of Example 9 in
Figure 12 reveals that almost the same rate characteristics are obtained notwithstanding
the difference in the raw materials in the oxidized carbon used for the positive electrodes.
Figure 13 shows that the secondary battery of Example 9 has better characteristics
than the secondary battery of Comparative Example 5. Also, comparison of the cycling
characteristics of the secondary battery of Example 5 in Figure 6 and the cycling
characteristics of the secondary battery of Example 9 in Figure 13 reveals that almost
the same rate characteristics can be obtained notwithstanding the difference in the
raw materials in the oxidized carbon used for the positive electrodes.
(3) Solubility of active material
[0106] As mentioned above, it is considered that the excellent cycle characteristics of
the lithium ion secondary battery with a positive electrode obtained by the method
according to the present invention is because almost all the surface of the particles
of the active material is covered with the paste-like carbon and this paste-like carbon
inhibits the degradation of the active material. To confirm this, the solubility of
the active material was investigated.
[0107] Each of the oxidized carbon in Example 1 and acetylene black was mixed with LiFePO
4 particles with an average diameter of 0.22 µm, LiCoO
2 particles with an average diameter of 0.26 µm, and LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 with an average diameter of 0.32 µm at the ratio by mass of 5:95, and then 5% by
mass of the total mass of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate quantity of N-methyl
pyrrolidone were added and kneaded sufficiently so that a slurry was formed, and this
slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given a rolling treatment, and
an electrode was obtained. By using this electrode and an electrolyte in which 1,000
ppm water was added to a solution of 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution, a coin-type battery was manufactured.
In this test, fine particles with a large specific surface area were used in order
to increase the area of the active material that contacts the electrolytic solution.
Also, 1000 ppm water was added for the purpose of conducting an accelerated test because
an active material dissolves more easily when there is more water. This battery was
left for 1 week at 60 °C, then it was disintegrated, and then the electrolyte was
collected and the amount of metal dissolved in the electrolyte was analyzed by using
an ICP emission analysis device. Table 1 shows the result obtained.
Table 1
| |
amount of dissolution of active material / % |
decrease ratio (against acetylene black) |
| Mn |
Fe |
Co |
Ni |
| LiFePO4 + acetylene black |
|
1.52 |
|
|
|
| LiFePO4 + carbon in Example 1 |
|
0.93 |
|
|
-39% |
| LiCoO2 + acetylene black |
|
|
13.1 |
|
|
| LiCoO2 + carbon in Example 1 |
|
|
6.05 |
|
-54% |
| LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2 + acetylene black |
4.5 |
|
1.59 |
1.32 |
|
| LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2 + carbon in Example 1 |
1.9 |
|
1.35 |
0.93 |
-44% |
[0108] As is evident from Table 1, the paste-like conductive carbon that is derived from
the oxidized carbon in Example 1 remarkably inhibits the dissolution of the active
material into the electrolyte, compared with acetylene black. This is conceivably
because the oxidized carbon of Example 1, even if its active material is fine particles
with an average particle diameter of 0.22 to 0.32 µm, effectively inhibits the aggregation
of these fine particles and covers almost all the surface of the particles of the
active material.
(4) Mixing state of oxidized carbon and active material
[0109] The following experiment was performed to confirm the mixing state of an active material
and carbon.
(i) Mixture of fine particles and carbon
[0110] Each of the oxidized carbon of Example 1 and acetylene black was introduced into
a mortar with LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 fine particles with an average particle diameter of 0.32 µm at the ratio by mass
of 20:80 and dry blending was conducted. Figure 14 shows SEM images at a magnification
of 50,000. It was found that, when acetylene black is used as carbon, compared with
the case where the oxidized carbon of Example 1 is used, the fine particles aggregate
even under the same mixing condition. Therefore, it was found that the oxidized carbon
of Example 1 effectively inhibits the aggregation of the fine particles.
(ii) Mixture of gross particles and carbon
[0111] Each of the oxidized carbon of Example 1 and acetylene black was introduced into
a mortar with LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 gross particles with an average particle diameter of 5 µm at the ratio by mass of
4:96 and dry blending was conducted. Figure 15 shows SEM images at a magnification
of 100,000. It was found that, when acetylene black is used as carbon, the gross particles
and acetylene black exist separately, but when the oxidized carbon of Example 1 is
used, the gross particles are covered by a paste-like object, and the outline form
of the gross particles is not clearly identifiable. This paste-like object is the
oxidized carbon obtained in Example 1, which spreads while covering the surface of
the gross particles due to the pressure of blending. It is considered that, by a rolling
treatment when an electrode is produced, the oxidized carbon of Example 1 further
spreads in a paste-like manner and becomes dense while covering the surface of the
particles of the active material, the particles of the active material approach each
other, and accordingly, the past-like oxidized carbon is pushed out into the gaps
formed between the adjacent particles of the active material and fills the gaps densely
while covering the surface of the particles of the active material, so that the amount
of the active material per unit volume in the electrode is increased and the electrode
density is increased.
(5) Usage of conductive carbon mixture
(i)Active material: LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2
Example 10
[0112] The oxidized carbon obtained in Example 1 and acetylene black (primary particle diameter:
40 nm) were introduced into a ball mill at the mass ratio of 1:1 and dry blended,
and a conductive carbon mixture was obtained. Figure 16 shows a SEM image of the conductive
carbon mixture obtained, and Figure 17 shows TEM images of the conductive carbon mixture
obtained. Figure 16 is an image at a magnification of 50,000, Figure 17(A) is an image
at a magnification of 100,000, and Figure 17(B) is an image at a magnification of
500,000. It reveals from the SEM image of Figure 16 the existence of a paste-like
carbon on the surface, because the outline of the carbon particles is not clearly
shown. Also, the TEM images of Figure 17 shows that the conductive carbon mixture
is composed of a granulated substance and a layered substance on the surface of the
granulated substance. The dashed line in Figure 17(B) shows the surface of the granulated
substance. The granulated substance is the particles of acetylene black, and the layered
substance is a layer that is formed because the oxidized carbon is collapsed and attached
to the surface of the particles of acetylene black. Figure 17(B) shows that the layered
object is composed of a paste-like part in which a non-granulated amorphous carbon
is linked, and a fibrous or acicular part.
[0113] Then, 4 % by mass of the conductive carbon mixture obtained, 2 % by mass of polyvinylidene
fluoride, and an adequate amount of N-methylpyrrolidone were wet blended, and then
94 % by mass of commercially-available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 particles (average particle diameter: 5 µm) was further added and wet blended, and
a slurry was formed. This slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given
a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material layer for a
lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive
electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight of the
active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of
the electrode density was 3.81 g/cc. Also, by using the positive electrode obtained,
a lithium ion secondary battery was produced, in which 1M LiPF
6 in a 1:1 ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate solution was used as an electrolytic
solution, and in which lithium was used as a counter electrode. The discharging curve
of the battery obtained was measured within the range of 4.5 to 3.0 V under the condition
of 25 °C and the discharging rate of 0.5 C, and the direct current internal resistance
(DCIR) was calculated from the voltage drop.
Example 11
[0114] 4 % by mass of the conductive carbon material obtained in Example 10 and 94 % by
mass of commercially available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 particles (average particle diameter: 5 µm) were dry blended, and then, 2 % by mass
of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate amount of N-methylpyrrolidone were wet
blended and a slurry was formed. This slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried
and then given a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material
layer for a lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the
positive electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight
of the active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value
of the electrode density was 3.80 g/cc. Further, by using the positive electrode obtained,
a lithium ion secondary battery was produced and the DCIR of the battery obtained
was calculated in the same procedure as Example 10.
[0115] The active material layers of the positive electrodes in Example 10 and 11 have the
same composition as the active material layer of the positive electrode in Example
5, but the order of blending each component element in the preparation process of
the electrode material is different. Figure 18 shows a SEM image of the cross-section
of the positive electrode in Example 10 at a magnification of 25,000. The SEM image
in Figure 18 is similar to the SEM image of the cross-section of the positive electrode
in Example 5, which is shown in Figure 2(B). That is, the grain boundary of the carbon
primary particles does not appear, the carbon is paste-like, this paste-like carbon
intrudes into the deep parts of the pores having a width of 50 nm or less of the particles
of the active material (ie. gaps between the primary particles), and gaps are virtually
absent. Also, 90 % or more of the surface of the particles of the active material
contacts the paste-like carbon. Since fine carbon particles are poorly compatible
with a binder and a solvent, when an electrode material in the form of slurry including
a binder and a solvent is prepared, it is typical that electrode active material particles
and carbon are dry blended, and then a binder and a solvent are added and wet blended.
However, the electrode densities of the positive electrodes in Example 10, Example
11 and Example 5 are almost the same and the observation results of the SEM images
are similar, therefore it has been found that the conductive carbon mixture is compatible
with a binder and a solvent, and leads an electrode that shows a similarly high electrode
density even if the conductive carbon mixture is wet blended with active material
particles in the presence of a binder and a solvent.
[0116] The DCIRs of the lithium ion secondary battery in Example 5 and the lithium ion secondary
battery in Comparative Example 5, which was produced by only using acetylene black
as a carbon, were measured in the same procedure as the procedure in Example 10, and
were compared with the DCIRs of the lithium ion secondary batteries in Example 10
and Example 11. Figure 19 shows the result. The DCIR of the lithium ion secondary
battery in Example 5 was remarkably lower than the DCR of the lithium ion secondary
battery in Comparative Example 5, which fact shows that remarkable decrease in DCIR
is achieved by using the electrode obtained by the method according to the present
invention. Also the DCIRs in the secondary batteries of Example 10 and Example 11
are still lower than the DCIR in the secondary battery of Example 5, which fact shows
that the conductive carbon mixture leads to a positive electrode with an excellent
conductive property regardless of the blending method of this mixture and electrode
active material particles.
(ii) Active material: LiCoO2
Example 12
[0117] 4 % by mass of the conductive carbon mixture obtained in Example 10, 2 % by mass
of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate amount of N-methylpyrrolidone were wet
blended, and then 94 % by mass of commercially available LiCoO
2 particles (average particle diameter: 10 µm) were further added and wet blended,
and a slurry was formed. This slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then
given a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material layer
for a lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive
electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight of the
active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of
the electrode density was 4.05 g/cc.
Example 13
[0118] 4 % by mass of the conductive carbon mixture obtained in Example 10 and 94 % by mass
of commercially available LiCoO
2 particles (average particle diameter: 10 µm) were dry blended, and then, 2 % by mass
of polyvinylidene fluoride and an adequate amount of N-methylpyrrolidone were wet
blended and a slurry was formed. This slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried
and then given a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material
layer for a lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the
positive electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight
of the active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value
of the electrode density was 4.05 g/cc.
[0119] The active material layers of the positive electrodes in Example 12 and 13 have the
same composition as the active material layer of the positive electrode in Example
7, but the order of blending each component element in the preparation process of
the electrode material is different. As the electrode densities in the positive electrodes
of Example 12, Example 13 and Example 7 are the same, it has been found that the conductive
carbon mixture is compatible with a binder and a solvent, and leads an electrode that
shows a similarly high electrode density even if the conductive carbon mixture is
wet blended with active material particles in the presence of a binder and a solvent.
(iii) Change of carbon to be blended with oxidized carbon
Example 14
[0120] The oxidized carbon obtained in Example 1 and vapor grown carbon fiber (average fiber
diameter: 150 nm, average fiber length: 3.9µm) were introduced into a ball mill at
the mass ratio of 1:1 and dry blended, and then a conductive carbon mixture was obtained.
Then, 4 % by mass of the conductive carbon mixture obtained, 2 % by mass of polyvinylidene
fluoride and an adequate amount of N-methylpyrrolidone were wet blended, and then
94 % by mass of commercially available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 particles (average particle diameter: 5 µm) were further added and wet blended, and
a slurry was formed. This slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given
a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material layer for a
lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive
electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight of the
active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of
the electrode density was 3.66 g/cc.
Comparative Example 8
[0121] 4 % by mass of the vapor grown carbon fiber used in Example 14, 2 % by mass of polyvinylidene
fluoride and an adequate amount of N-methylpyrrolidone were wet blended, then 94 %
by mass of commercially available LiNi
0.5Mn
0.3Co
0.2O
2 particles (average particle diameter: 5 µm) were further added and wet blended, and
a slurry was formed. This slurry was coated on an aluminum foil, dried and then given
a rolling treatment, and a positive electrode with an active material layer for a
lithium ion secondary battery was obtained. The electrode density of the positive
electrode was calculated from the measured values of the volume and weight of the
active material layer on the aluminum foil in the positive electrode. The value of
the electrode density was 3.36 g/cc.
[0122] Comparison of Example 14 and Comparative Example 8 shows that the electrode density
is significantly improved by using the conductive carbon mixture containing the oxidized
carbon obtained in Example 1.
Example 15
[0123] The procedure of Example 14 was repeated except that graphene (plane direction length:
2µm, cross direction length: several nm) was used instead of the vapor grown carbon
fiber. The value of the electrode density was 3.69 g/cc.
Comparative Example 9
[0124] The procedure of Comparative Example 8 was repeated except that the graphene that
was used in Example 15 was used instead of the vapor grown carbon fiber. The value
of the electrode density was 3.45 g/cc.
[0125] Comparison of Example 15 and Comparative Example 9 shows that the electrode density
is significantly improved by using the conductive carbon mixture containing the oxidized
carbon obtained in Example 1.
Example 16
[0126] The procedure of Example 14 was repeated except that furnace black (average particle
diameter: 35 nm) was used instead of the vapor grown carbon fiber. The value of the
electrode density was 3.76 g/cc.
Comparative Example 10
[0127] The procedure of Comparative Example 8 was repeated except that the furnace black
that was used in Example 16 was used instead of the vapor grown carbon fiber. The
value of the electrode density was 3.42 g/cc.
[0128] Comparison of Example 16 and Comparative Example 10 shows that the electrode density
is significantly improved by using the conductive carbon mixture containing the oxidized
carbon obtained in Example 1.
Example 17
[0129] The procedure of Example 14 was repeated except that graphite (average particle diameter:
6 µm) was used instead of the vapor grown carbon fiber. The value of the electrode
density was 3.81 g/cc.
Comparative Example 11
[0130] The procedure of Comparative Example 8 was repeated except that the graphite that
was used in Example 17 was used instead of the vapor grown carbon fiber. The value
of the electrode density was 3.48 g/cc.
[0131] Comparison of Example 17 and Comparative Example 11 shows that the electrode density
is significantly improved by using the conductive carbon mixture containing the oxidized
carbon obtained in Example 1.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0132] By using the electrode obtained by the method according to the present invention,
an electrode device with a high energy density can be obtained.