Preferential Pyrolysis Construction of Carbon Anodes with 8400 h Lifespan for High-Energy-Density K-ion Batteries

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Abstract

Carbonaceous materials are promising anodes for practical potassium-ion batteries, but fail to meet the requirements for durability and high capacities at low potentials. Herein, we constructed a durable carbon anode for high-energy-density K-ion full cells by a preferential pyrolysis strategy. Utilizing S and N volatilization from a π–π stacked supermolecule, the preferential pyrolysis process introduces low-potential active sites of sp2 hybridized carbon and carbon vacancies, endowing a low-potential “vacancy-adsorption/intercalation” mechanism. The as-prepared carbon anode exhibits a high capacity of 384.2 mAh g−1 (90 % capacity locates below 1 V vs. K/K+), which contributes to a high energy density of 163 Wh kg−1 of K-ion full battery. Moreover, abundant vacancies of carbon alleviate volume variation, boosting the cycling stability over 14 000 cycles (8400 h). Our work provides a new synthesis approach for durable carbon anodes of K-ion full cells with high energy densities.

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Yin, J., Jin, J., Chen, C., Lei, Y., Tian, Z., Wang, Y., … Alshareef, H. N. (2023). Preferential Pyrolysis Construction of Carbon Anodes with 8400 h Lifespan for High-Energy-Density K-ion Batteries. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 62(17). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202301396

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