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Year: | 2009 | ||||
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Type of Publication: | Article | ||||||
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Journal: | Science | Volume: | 324 | ||||
Number: | 5930 | Pages: | 1051-1055 | ||||
Month: | MAY 22 2009 | ||||||
Note: | PT: J; TC: 211; UT: WOS:000266246700036 |
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Abstract: | Development of materials that deliver more energy at high rates is important for high-power applications, including portable electronic devices and hybrid electric vehicles. For lithium-ion (Li(+)) batteries, reducing material dimensions can boost Li(+) ion and electron transfer in nanostructured electrodes. By manipulating two genes, we equipped viruses with peptide groups having affinity for single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) on one end and peptides capable of nucleating amorphous iron phosphate (a-FePO(4)) fused to the viral major coat protein. The virus clone with the greatest affinity toward SWNTs enabled power performance of a-FePO(4) comparable to that of crystalline lithium iron phosphate (c-LiFePO(4)) and showed excellent capacity retention upon cycling at 1C. This environmentally benign low-temperature biological scaffold could facilitate fabrication of electrodes from materials previously excluded because of extremely low electronic conductivity. |
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