The initial galvanostatic discharge-charge curves of four different cathodes were shown in
Fig. 3b. It was noted that the Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode delivered a specific capacity of 9327.9 mAh/g at a current density of 100 mA/g when discharged to 2.35 V. However, Co
0.85Se@CNT-40, pure Co
0.85Se, and pure CNT cathodes could only exhibit 6264.6, 4911.0 and 2132.4 mAh/g, respectively. Furthermore, the LOBs with Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode could deliver a specific capacity of 7813.1 mAh/g when recharged to 4.35 V, which was much larger than that using Co
0.85Se@CNT-40, pure Co
0.85Se and pure CNT cathodes (5621.4, 3780.3 and 1550.9 mAh/g). More importantly, the initial overpotentials for ORR/OER process of the Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode were only 0.18/0.79 V with the voltage platforms of 2.73/4.19 V, which were remarkably lower than other cathodes, suggesting its superior electrocatalytic efficiency. The rate capability of the Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode was checked at different current densities from 100 mA/g to 500 mA/g (
Fig. 3c). The initial discharge/charge capacity at current densities of 100, 300 and 500 mA/g were 9327.9/7813.1, 7081.8/5360.4 and 4655.3/3023.1 mAh/g, respectively. As the current density increased, the specific capacity did not fade quickly. The durability of the catalytic ability of Co
0.85Se@CNT cathode in LOBs was evaluated by limiting the specific capacity at low and high current densities.
Figs. 3d and
e showed the selected discharge/charge profiles and terminal voltage of Co
0.85Se@CNT-80, Co
0.85Se@CNT-40, pure Co
0.85Se, and pure CNT cathodes at a current density of 100 mA/g and limited capacity of 600 mAh/g. The (101) plane highly exposed Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode stably worked over 2400 h which was about 1.7 times longer than that of Co
0.85Se@CNT-40 cathode embedded by irregular Co
0.85Se particles. On the contrary, the batteries with pure Co
0.85Se and pure CNT cathodes died after 600 and 288 h, respectively. It is worth noting that the Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode exhibited obviously lower ORR/OER overpotentials compared to other cathodes, in which the terminal discharge voltage was stable at around 2.62 V and the charge voltage stabilized at 4.36 V, indicating that the (101) plane highly exposed Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode can efficiently and sustainably maintain its catalytic ability for the formation and decomposition of discharge product Li
2O
2. When the current density increased to 500 mA/g (
Figs. 3f and
g), the Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 electrode worked for 294 cycles with lower overpotentials compared to that of Co
0.85Se@CNT-40 electrode (154 cycles), suggesting that the superior reversibility of Co
0.85Se@CNT-80 cathode. For pure Co
0.85Se and pure CNT, the voltage soon dropped to 2.0 V in the 91
st, and 63
rd cycle revealed in
Fig. 3g and Figs. S5-S7 (Supporting information). These results demonstrated that Co
0.85Se catalyst with highly exposed (101) plane exhibited superior cycle stability, large specific capacity and low overpotentials. It is thought that the (101) plane with the lattice matching effect with Li
2O
2 contributed significantly to the performance improvement.