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Overcoming the Trade-Off between Initial Coulombic Efficiency and Rate Performance in Hard Carbon Anodes for Sodium-Ion Storage

Zesheng Li, Yufei Gao, Wen Luo, Zian Xu, Jiahui Wu, Yueyang Wang, Kai Zhang, Rouxi Chen, Zhouguang Lu, Hsing-Lin Wang

2026ACS Nano6 citationsDOI

Abstract

Hard carbon (HC) has emerged as a promising anode for sodium-ion batteries owing to its low-voltage plateau and cost-effectiveness. However, HC anodes still suffer from a performance trade-off between the initial Coulombic efficiency (ICE) and rate capability. To address this issue, we propose a scalable synthesis method, the melt-spinning technique (kilogram scale) with a hexamethylenetetramine (HMTA) cross-linking-oxidation strategy, to multidimensionally regulate the structure of phenolic resin-derived hard carbon (CPF-1400) as high-performance anodes. Experimental studies demonstrate that the spatially cross-linked precursor with methylene bridge (–CH 2 –) and rich carbonyl groups (C═O) effectively suppresses excessive graphitization (even at 1400 °C) and enlarges the spacing of carbon interlayers from 0.367 to 0.381 nm. Additionally, it enables the reduction of the specific surface area to merely 1.4 m 2 g –1 and generates abundant and suitable-sized closed pores (0.315 cm 3 g –1, 1.26 nm) for CPF-1400. Therefore, CPF-1400 delivers an exceptional reversible sodium storage capacity of 431 mAh g –1 with an unprecedentedly high ICE of 95%. Notably, it also retains a rate capability of 308 mAh g –1 at 1 A g –1, and it achieves a high energy density of 293 Wh kg –1 assembled in full cells. Electrochemical analyses combined with in situ characterizations demonstrate a three-stage sodium storage mechanism in hard carbon and elucidate the correlation between the solid–electrolyte interphase (SEI) and battery performance.

Topics & Concepts

Faraday efficiencyMaterials scienceAnodeCarbon fibersElectrochemistryChemical engineeringNanotechnologyEnergy storageBattery (electricity)HexamethylenetetramineSubstrate (aquarium)GraphyneInterphaseSodium-ion batteryDegradation (telecommunications)SodiumSulfurAdvancements in Battery MaterialsAdvanced Battery Materials and TechnologiesAdvanced battery technologies research
Overcoming the Trade-Off between Initial Coulombic Efficiency and Rate Performance in Hard Carbon Anodes for Sodium-Ion Storage | Litcius