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Mechanism of Na-Ion Storage in Hard Carbon Anodes Revealed by Heteroatom Doping.

Authors :
Li, Zhifei
Bommier, Clement
Chong, Zhi Sen
Jian, Zelang
Surta, Todd Wesley
Wang, Xingfeng
Xing, Zhenyu
Neuefeind, Joerg C.
Stickle, William F.
Dolgos, Michelle
Greaney, P. Alex
Ji, Xiulei
Source :
Advanced Energy Materials. 9/20/2017, Vol. 7 Issue 18, pn/a-N.PAG. 10p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Hard carbon is the leading candidate anode for commercialization of Na-ion batteries. Hard carbon has a unique local atomic structure, which is composed of nanodomains of layered rumpled sheets that have short-range local order resembling graphene within each layer, but complete disorder along the c-axis between layers. A primary challenge holding back the development of Na-ion batteries is that a complete understanding of the structure-capacity correlations of Na-ion storage in hard carbon has remained elusive. This article presents two key discoveries: first, the characteristics of hard carbons structure can be modified systematically by heteroatom doping, and second, that these structural changes greatly affect Na-ion storage properties, which reveals the mechanisms for Na storage in hard carbon. Specifically, via P or S doping, the interlayer spacing is dilated, which extends the low-voltage plateau capacity, while increasing the defect concentrations with P or B doping leads to higher sloping sodiation capacity. The combined experimental studies and first principles calculations reveal that it is the Na-ion-defect binding that corresponds to the sloping capacity, while the Na intercalation between graphenic layers causes the low-potential plateau capacity. The understanding suggests a new design principle of hard carbon anode: more reversibly binding defects and dilated turbostratic domains, given that the specific surface area is maintained low. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16146832
Volume :
7
Issue :
18
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Advanced Energy Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
125244456
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/aenm.201602894