Login / Signup

Pseudocapacitive Potassium-Ion Intercalation Enabled by Topologically Defective Soft Carbon toward High-Rate, Large-Areal-Capacity, and Low-Temperature Potassium-Ion Batteries.

Haozhen YangJunlong HuangShaohong LiuYongqi ChenZongheng CenChenguang ShiYuheng LuRuowen Fu
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Carbonaceous materials are widely investigated as anodes for potassium-ion batteries (PIBs). However, the inferior rate capability, low areal capacity, and limited working temperature caused by sluggish K-ions diffusion kinetics are still primary challenges for carbon-based anodes. Herein, a simple temperature-programmed co-pyrolysis strategy is proposed for the efficient synthesis of topologically defective soft carbon (TDSC) based on inexpensive pitch and melamine. The skeletons of TDSC are optimized with shortened graphite-like microcrystals, enlarged interlayer spacing, and abundant topological defects (e.g., pentagons, heptagons, and octagons), which endow TDSC with fast pseudocapacitive K-ion intercalation behavior. Meanwhile, micrometer-sized structure can reduce the electrolyte degradation over particle surface and avoid unnecessary voids, ensuring a high initial Coulombic efficiency as well as high energy density. These synergistic structural advantages contribute to excellent rate capability (116 mA h g -1 at 20 C), impressive areal capacity (1.83 mA h cm -2 with a mass loading of 8.32 mg cm -2 ), long-term cycling stability (capacity retention of 91.8% after 1200 h cycling), and low working temperature (-10 °C) of TDSC anodes, demonstrating great potential for the practical application of PIBs.
Keyphrases
  • ion batteries
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • quantum dots
  • aqueous solution
  • cancer therapy
  • human health
  • image quality
  • climate change