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Design Nitrogen (N) and Sulfur (S) Co‐Doped 3D Graphene Network Architectures for High‐Performance Sodium Storage
Author(s) -
Jiang Yu,
Wu Ying,
Chen Yuexi,
Qi Zhenyu,
Shi Jinan,
Gu Lin,
Yu Yan
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201703471
Subject(s) - materials science , graphene , anode , electrochemistry , electrode , cathode , chemical engineering , energy storage , nanotechnology , porosity , doping , supercapacitor , optoelectronics , chemistry , composite material , power (physics) , physics , quantum mechanics , engineering
To develop high‐performance sodium‐ion batteries (NIBs), electrodes should possess well‐defined pathways for efficient electronic/ionic transport. In this work, high‐performance NIBs are demonstrated by designing a 3D interconnected porous structure that consists of N, S co‐doped 3D porous graphene frameworks (3DPGFs‐NS). The most typical electrode materials (i.e., Na 3 V 2 (PO 4 ) 3 (NVP), MoS 2 , and TiO 2 ) are anchored onto the 3DPGFs‐NS matrix (denoted as NVP@C@3DPGFs‐NS; MoS 2 @C@3DPGFs‐NS and TiO 2 @C@3DPGFs‐NS) to demonstrate its general process to boost the energy density of NIBs. The N, S co‐doped porous graphene structure with a large surface area offers fast ionic transport within the electrode and facilitates efficient electron transport, and thus endows the 3DPGFs‐NS‐based composite electrodes with excellent sodium storage performance. The resulting NVP@C@3DPGFs‐NS displays excellent electrochemical performance as both cathode and anode for NIBs. The MoS 2 @C@3DPGFs‐NS and TiO 2 @C@3DPGFs‐NS deliver capacities of 317 mAhg −1 at 5 Ag −1 after 1000 cycles and 185 mAhg −1 at 1 Ag −1 after 2000 cycles, respectively. The excellent long cycle life is attributed to the 3D porous structure that could greatly release mechanical stress from repeated Na + extraction/insertion. The novel structure 3D PGFs‐NS provides a general approach to modify electrodes of NIBs and holds great potential applications in other energy storage fields.

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