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Anode Active Material

Graphite anode material - standard grade

Standard graphite is used for lithium-ion anode formulation, baseline electrode development, and electrolyte compatibility screening.

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Product Details

Graphite anode material - standard grade

Category
Anode Active Material
Availability
RFQ
Grade
Ordinary graphite, commercial anode grade
Documents
SDS / COA / TDS

Typical Specification

  • D50 typically 10-20 um
  • Tap density typically >=1.0 g/cm3
  • Reversible capacity typically 340-360 mAh/g
  • First-cycle efficiency commonly >=90%

Specifications vary by grade and production lot. Confirm the applicable COA or TDS, sampling method, and acceptance limits before cell qualification.

Use Cases

  • Standard graphite is used for lithium-ion anode formulation, baseline electrode development, and electrolyte compatibility screening.
  • Requested materials can be quoted for R&D, pilot-scale qualification, or production-scale sourcing after grade, particle-size, documentation, and packaging requirements are confirmed.
  • Typical supporting documents may include SDS, COA, and TDS depending on supplier lot and requested specification.

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Technical Selection Guide

How should Graphite anode material - standard grade be evaluated?

Graphite anode material - standard grade is a standard graphite grade for lithium-ion anode development. Graphite performance depends on particle morphology, surface area, tap density, coating, first-cycle efficiency, rate capability, and compatibility with the selected electrolyte and formation protocol.

Why developers evaluate it

  • Graphite-electrolyte and SEI screening
  • Rate, fast-charge, and low-temperature cell development
  • Electrode-density and loading optimization

Development considerations

  • Confirm particle-size distribution and surface treatment
  • Monitor lithium-plating risk at high charge rate
  • Evaluate swelling, gas, EIS, and first-cycle loss

How to compare it

Compare graphite grades at matched areal capacity, porosity, electrolyte loading, and formation. A higher-power grade may improve kinetics but can trade against tap density, surface area, or initial efficiency.