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Achieving Ultrahigh-Rate and Low-Temperature Sodium Storage of FePS 3 via In Situ Construction of Graphitized Porous N-Doped Carbon.

Song HuangMinghui YeYufei ZhangYongchao TangXiaoqing LiuCheng Chao Li
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) have become an important supplementation to lithium-ion batteries. Unfortunately, the low capacity and inferior low-temperature performance of traditional hard carbon led to limited energy density and a range of applications of SIBs. Herein, we present high-performance SIBs via embedding FePS 3 in graphitized porous N-doped carbon (FPS/GPNC) using coordination polymerization reaction. Such unique graphitized pores are in situ-constructed by the self-aggregation of Fe nanoparticles with high surface energy at high temperatures, which affords a three-dimensional open channel and a graphitized conductive network for fast transportation of Na + and electrons. Moreover, an ingenious buffer barrier composed of graphitized pores is constructed for FePS 3 to withstand volume fluctuation during cycling. Consequently, a superior capacity of 354.2 mAh g -1 is delivered even when the rate increases to 50 A g -1 . The impressing cycling lifespan up to 4700 cycles is achieved at 30 A g -1 with excellent retention of 84.4%. Interestingly, the low-temperature performance (-20 °C) of FePS 3 is explored for the first time, and excellent stability (502.6 mAh g -1 maintained after 100 cycles at 0.1 A g -1 ) is obtained, indicating huge potential of practical application. This work provides insights into designing high-rate, high-capacity, and low-temperature SIBs.
Keyphrases
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