In Situ Construction of Nitrogen-Doped and Zinc-Confined Microporous Carbon Enabling Efficient Na + -Storage Abilities.
Wan-Ling LiaoMohamed M AbdelaalRene-Mary AmirthaChia-Chen FangChun-Chen YangTai-Feng HungPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Benefiting from the additional active sites for sodium-ion (Na + ) adsorption and porous architecture for electrolyte accessibility, nitrogen-doped porous carbon has been considered the alternative anode material for Na + -storage applications. In this study, nitrogen-doped and zinc-confined microporous carbon ( N,Z -MPC) powders are successfully prepared by thermally pyrolyzing the polyhedral ZIF-8 nanoparticles under an argon atmosphere. Following the electrochemical measurements, the N,Z -MPC not only delivers good reversible capacity (423 mAh/g at 0.02 A/g) and comparable rate capability (104 mAh/g at 1.0 A/g) but also achieves a remarkable cyclability (capacity retention: 96.6% after 3000 cycles at 1.0 A/g). Those can be attributed to its intrinsic characteristics: (a) 67% of the disordered structure, (b) 0.38 nm of interplanar distance, (c) a great proportion of sp 2 -type carbon, (d) abundant microporosity, (e) 16.1% of nitrogen doping, and (f) existence of sodiophilic Zn species, synergistically enhancing the electrochemical performances. Accordingly, the findings observed here support the N,Z -MPC to be a potential anode material enabling exceptional Na + -storage abilities.