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Boosting Molecular Cross-Linking in a Phenolic Resin for Spherical Hard Carbon with Enriched Closed Pores toward Enhanced Sodium Storage Ability.

Liewen GuoChuang QiuRenlu YuanXiaotian LiXin LiKairan LiWanxiong ZhuXuewei LiuAng LiHaiyan LiuXiaohong ChenHuaihe Song
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Phenolic resin (PF) is considered a promising precursor of hard carbon (HC) for advanced-performance anodes in sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) because of its facile designability and high residual carbon yield. However, understanding how the structure of PF precursors influences sodium storage in their derived HC remains a significant challenge. Herein, the microstructure of HC is controlled by the degree of cross-linking of resorcinol-benzaldehyde (RB) resin. We reveal that robust molecular cross-linking in RB resin induced by hydrothermal treatment promotes closed-pore formation in the derived HC. The mechanism is devised for the decomposition of a highly cross-linked RB three-dimensional network into randomly stacked short-range graphitic microcrystals during high-temperature carbonization, contributing to the abundant closed pores in the derived HC. In addition, the high cross-linking degree of RB resin endows its derived HC with a small-sized spherical morphology and large interlayer spacing, which improves the rate performance of HC. Consequently, the optimized hydrothermal treatment HC anode shows a higher specific capacity of 372.7 mAh g -1 and better rate performance than the HC anode without hydrothermal treatment (276.0 mAh g -1 ). This strategy can provide feasible molecular cross-linking engineering for the development of closed pores in PF-based HC toward enhanced sodium storage.
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