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Regulating the Pore Structure of Activated Carbon by Pitch for High-Performance Sodium-Ion Storage.

Yan-Ru TianZong-Lin YiFang-Yuan SuLi-Jing XieXu-Feng ZhangXiong-Fei LiJia-Yao ChengJing-Peng ChenCheng-Meng Chen
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
The pore structure of carbon anodes plays a crucial role in enhancing the sodium storage capacity. Designing more confined pores in carbon anodes is accepted as an effective strategy. However, current design strategies for confined pores in carbon anodes fail to achieve both high capacity and initial Coulombic efficiency (ICE) simultaneously. Herein, we develop a strategy for utilizing the repeated impregnation and precarbonization method of liquid pitch to regulate the pore structure of the activated carbon (AC) material. Driven by capillary coalescence, the pitch is impregnated into the pores of AC, which reduces the specific surface area of the material. During the carbonization process, numerous pores with diameters less than 1 nm are formed, resulting in a high capacity and improved ICE of the carbon anode. Moreover, the ordered carbon layers derived from the liquid pitch also enhance the electrical conductivity, thereby improving the rate capability of as-obtained carbon anodes. This enables the fabricated material (XA-4T-1300) to have a high ICE of 91.1% and a capacity of 383.0 mA h g -1 at 30 mA g -1 . The capacity retention is 95.5% after 300 cycles at 1 A g -1 . This study proposes a practical approach to adjust the microcrystalline and pore structures to enhance the performance of sodium-ion storage in materials.
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