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Atomically dispersed Ni induced by ultrahigh N-doped carbon enables stable sodium storage

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 13:12 authored by Keming Song, Jiefei Liu, Hongliu Dai, Yong Zhao, Shuhui Sun, Jiyu Zhang, Changdong Qin, Pengfei Yan, Fengqi Guo, Caiyun Wang, Yuliang Cao, Shunfang Li, Weihua Chen
Building phase interface with enough solid-phase contact is of great importance for improving chemical reaction kinetics and depth. High dispersion of electrode materials, especially at the atomic-level, are known for high interface contact, yet their potential application in batteries is restricted due to low loading. Herein, the atomically dispersed metal Ni (Ni in Ni–N–C is 54.9 wt %) with high loading was achieved by ultrahigh N-doping carbon (N/N–C:29.5 wt %) during the discharging process of nickel sulfide, leading to good reversibility and high-capacity maintenance owing to ultrahigh phase contact during long cycling for sodium-ion batteries. It delivers a stable cycling life (0.061% capacity decay per cycle) compared with the poor cyclability (0.418%) for the Ni agglomeration electrode with lower N-doping. The assembled pouch cells achieve robust stability (92.1% after 50 cycles). DFT calculations reveal that ultrahigh N-doping and electrochemically formed Na2S can provide thermally stable Na2S/Ni/NC structures, inhibiting Ni agglomeration during cycling.

Funding

Australian National Fabrication Facility (21771164)

History

Journal title

Chem

Volume

7

Issue

10

Pagination

2684-2694

Language

English

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