Dual-regulation of pore confinement and mouth size for enhanced sodium storage in hard carbon
收藏中国科学数据2026-04-24 更新2026-04-25 收录
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https://www.sciengine.com/AA/doi/10.1016/j.jechem.2025.08.038
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Hard carbon (HC) remains a leading anode candidate for sodium-ion storage, yet its application is hindered by low initial Coulombic efficiency (ICE) and limited plateau capacity due to uncontrolled defect density and open porosity. Here, we propose a scalable dual-regulation strategy that simultaneously tunes pore mouth size and defect chemistry to enhance sodium storage performance. Using phenol-formaldehyde resin as the carbon precursor and phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5) as a bifunctional sacrificial template and dopant source, we synthesize phosphorus-functionalized hard carbon (PF-PHC) featuring a high density of closed pores with well-confined sub-nanometer pore entrances. The in-situ sublimation of P2O5 during pyrolysis promotes the formation of closed-pore architectures, while residual phosphorus atoms effectively passivate vacancy-type defects, thereby reducing irreversible Na+ adsorption and mitigating excessive solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation. As a result, PF-PHC achieves an ICE of 89.3% and a plateau capacity of 289 mAh g−1. In-situ characterizations reveal that regulating pore mouth dimensions decouples Na+ and solvent access, enabling highly selective ion transport and stable interfacial chemistry. Sodium-ion hybrid capacitors (SIHCs) assembled based on PF-PHC deliver exceptional rate performance and outstanding long-term cycling stability, retaining 98.2% after 10,000 cycles at 2 A g−1. This study establishes pore mouth engineering as a robust and scalable design principle for advancing next-generation HC-based sodium storage materials.
创建时间:
2026-04-24



