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Unlocking Fast Na+ Transport in Sodium Iron Sulfate Via Coupled Electronic–Ionic Modulation

  • Hui Zhou
  • , Yuhang Xin
  • , Qingbo Zhou
  • , Yingshuai Wang
  • , Yunfei Shen
  • , Hexiao Zhang
  • , Yonghao Liu
  • , Runqing Ou
  • , Yang Lv
  • , Peng Gao
  • , Hongcai Gao*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Beijing Institute of Technology
  • Tianjin Institute of Power Sources

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Alluaudite-type sodium iron sulfate is an attractive cathode for sodium-ion batteries owing to its high Fe2+/Fe3+ redox potential and robust polyanionic framework; however, its rate capability is intrinsically limited by sluggish Na+ transport arising from electronic localization within the Fe–O network. Here, we demonstrate that fast Na+ transport in sodium iron sulfate can be unlocked through a coupled electronic–ionic modulation enabled by Fe-site isovalent Zn substitution, which regulates the electronic structure while preserving the crystallographic framework. Density functional theory calculations reveal that Zn incorporation redistributes Fe–O electronic states, induces site-dependent Na–O coordination, and significantly lowers the Na+ migration barrier. These insights are corroborated by systematic experimental characterizations. As a result of the accelerated Na+ transport kinetics, the optimized Na2.6Fe1.65Zn0.05(SO4)3 cathode delivers an initial reversible capacity of ≈109 mAh g−1, maintains 81.5 mAh g−1 at 30 C, and retains 72.9 mAh g−1 with 87.7% capacity retention after 10 000 cycles at 20 C. This work establishes coupled electronic–ionic modulation as an effective strategy for unlocking fast Na+ transport in polyanionic cathodes, offering mechanistic insights for the rational design of high-rate and long-life sodium-ion battery materials.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere73354
JournalSmall
Volume22
Issue number30
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 May 2026

Keywords

  • Na transport kinetics
  • coupled electronic–ionic modulation
  • isovalent cation substitution
  • sodium iron sulfate
  • sodium-ion batteries

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