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Order-in-disordered ultrathin carbon nanostructure with nitrogen-rich defects bridged by pseudographitic domains for high-performance ion capture

Mingxing Liang, Yifan Ren, Jun Cui, Xiaochen Zhang, Siyang Xing, Jingjing Lei, Mengyao He, Haijiao Xie, Libo Deng, Fei Yu, Jie Ma

2024Nature Communications86 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Carbon materials with defect-rich structure are highly demanded for various electrochemical scenes, but encountering a conflict with the deteriorative intrinsic conductivity. Herein, we build a highway-mediated nanoarchitecture that consists of the ordered pseudographitic nanodomains among disordered highly nitrogen-doped segments through a supramolecular self-assembly strategy. The “order-in-disorder” nanosheet-like carbon obtained at 800 °C (O/D NSLC-800) achieves a tradeoff with high defect degree (21.9 at% of doped nitrogen) and compensated electrical conductivity simultaneously. As expected, symmetrical O/D NSLC-800 electrodes exhibit superior capacitive deionization (CDI) performance, including brackish water desalination (≈82 mgNaCl g−1 at a cell voltage of 1.6 V in a 1000 mg L−1 NaCl solution) and reusage of actual refining circulating cooling water, outperforming most of the reported state-of-the-art CDI electrodes. The implanted pseudographitic nanodomains lower the resistance and activation energy of charge transfer, which motivates the synergy of hosting sites of multiple nitrogen configurations. Our findings shed light on electrically conductive nanoarchitecture design of defect-rich materials for advanced electrochemical applications based on molecular-level modulation. Carbon materials are widely used in electrochemical technologies. However, their intrinsic conductivity deteriorates over time. Here the authors build a highway-mediated nanoarchitecture of ordered pseudographitic nanodomains to promote charge transfer for electrochemical ion capture.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceCapacitive deionizationElectrochemistryCarbon fibersConductivityNanosheetNanotechnologyElectrodeNanostructureIonNitrogenChemical engineeringChemistryComposite materialEngineeringOrganic chemistryComposite numberPhysical chemistryMembrane-based Ion Separation TechniquesAdvancements in Battery MaterialsAdvanced Battery Materials and Technologies