Tuning nitrogen species in three-dimensional porous carbon via phosphorus doping for ultra-fast potassium storage
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 04:01authored byHanna He, Dan Huang, Yougen Tang, Qi Wang, Xiaobo Ji, Haiyan Wang, Zaiping GuoZaiping Guo
Carbonaceous materials have been proved to be promising materials for energy storage. Heteroatom doping, especially N doping, could further promote their electrochemical performance, and the type of doped N configuration plays a key role in determining the reactivity of doped carbon. However, achieving a high proportion of active N (pyridinic N) in N doped carbon is still a big challenge. In this work, we successfully tuned the N species and achieved high-level pyridinic N in carbon via constructing a three-dimensional (3D) honeycomb-like structure in conjunction with phosphorus doping. The 3D porous structure with sufficient pore defects and edges provides the preconditions for the formation of pyridinic N, and the subsequent P-doping leads to more open edge sites, which further facilitate the formation of pyridinic N. This modification greatly promoted the reactivity of the carbon framework, contributing to rapid interfacial K+ adsorption reactions. The as-obtained P-doped N-rich honeycomb-like carbon thus achieved ultrahigh reversible capacity and outstanding rate capability (with capacities of 419.3 and 270.4 mA h g−1 obtained at 100 and 1000 mA g−1, respectively). This outstanding performance demonstrates that adjusting the proportion of active N in N-doped carbon offers a promising approach toward excellent N-doped carbon materials for energy storage systems.
Funding
Exploration of Advanced Nanostructures for Sodium-ion Battery Application
He, H., Huang, D., Tang, Y., Wang, Q., Ji, X., Wang, H. & Guo, Z. (2019). Tuning nitrogen species in three-dimensional porous carbon via phosphorus doping for ultra-fast potassium storage. Nano Energy, 57 728-736.