TY - JOUR
T1 - Sulfur Encapsulation and Sulfur Doping Synergistically Enhance Sodium Ion Storage in Microporous Carbon Anodes
AU - Feng, Xin
AU - Li, Yu
AU - Zhang, Minghao
AU - Li, Ying
AU - Gong, Yuteng
AU - Liu, Mingquan
AU - Bai, Ying
AU - Wu, Chuan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2022/11/16
Y1 - 2022/11/16
N2 - MOF-based materials are a class of efficient precursors for the preparation of heteroatom-doped porous carbon materials that have been widely applied as anode materials for Na-ion batteries. Thereinto, sulfur is often introduced to increase defects and act as an active species to directly react with sodium ions. Although the sulfur introduction and high surface area can synergistically improve capacity and rate capability, the initial Coulombic efficiency (ICE) and electrical conductivity of carbon material are inevitably reduced. Therefore, balancing sodium storage capacity and ICE is still the bottleneck faced by adsorbent carbon materials. Here, sulfur-encapsulated microporous carbon material with nitrogen, sulfur dual-doping (NSPC) is synthesized by postprocessing, achieving the reduced specific surface area by encapsulating sulfur in micropores, and the increased active sites by edge sulfur doping. The synergy between encapsulation and sulfur doping effectively balances specific capacity, rate capability, and ICE. The NSPC material exhibits capacities of 591.5 and 244.2 mAh g-1 at 0.5 and at 10 A g-1, respectively, and the ICE is as high as 72.3%. Moreover, the effect of nitrogen and sulfur on the improvement of electron/ion diffusion kinetics is resonantly demonstrated by density functional theory calculations. This synergistic preparation method may reveal a feasible thought for fabricating excellent-performance adsorption-type carbon materials for Na-ion batteries.
AB - MOF-based materials are a class of efficient precursors for the preparation of heteroatom-doped porous carbon materials that have been widely applied as anode materials for Na-ion batteries. Thereinto, sulfur is often introduced to increase defects and act as an active species to directly react with sodium ions. Although the sulfur introduction and high surface area can synergistically improve capacity and rate capability, the initial Coulombic efficiency (ICE) and electrical conductivity of carbon material are inevitably reduced. Therefore, balancing sodium storage capacity and ICE is still the bottleneck faced by adsorbent carbon materials. Here, sulfur-encapsulated microporous carbon material with nitrogen, sulfur dual-doping (NSPC) is synthesized by postprocessing, achieving the reduced specific surface area by encapsulating sulfur in micropores, and the increased active sites by edge sulfur doping. The synergy between encapsulation and sulfur doping effectively balances specific capacity, rate capability, and ICE. The NSPC material exhibits capacities of 591.5 and 244.2 mAh g-1 at 0.5 and at 10 A g-1, respectively, and the ICE is as high as 72.3%. Moreover, the effect of nitrogen and sulfur on the improvement of electron/ion diffusion kinetics is resonantly demonstrated by density functional theory calculations. This synergistic preparation method may reveal a feasible thought for fabricating excellent-performance adsorption-type carbon materials for Na-ion batteries.
KW - microporous carbon anodes
KW - pseudocapacitive
KW - sodium ion batteries
KW - sulfur doping
KW - sulfur encapsulation
KW - synergistically enhance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85141996724&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.2c15694
DO - 10.1021/acsami.2c15694
M3 - Article
C2 - 36331897
AN - SCOPUS:85141996724
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 14
SP - 50992
EP - 51000
JO - ACS applied materials & interfaces
JF - ACS applied materials & interfaces
IS - 45
ER -