Defects and sulfur-doping design of porous carbon spheres for high-capacity potassium-ion storage†
Abstract
Heteroatom-doping had been demonstrated to effectively improve the capacitive energy storage of hard carbon in potassium ion batteries (KIBs). However, external defects introduced during the doping process are responsible for the alteration of the microstructure of the carbon host. But there is a scarcity of systematic in-depth understanding of the comprehensive effects of defects and heteroatoms in hard carbon for K storage performance. Herein, a series of porous carbon microspheres at different defect levels and S-doping amounts (SPCS) were simply synthesized at different carbonization temperatures. It was found that various microstructural features of SPCS exhibited different trends with the change of carbonization temperature. Moreover, the depth of the K-ion insertion reaction, the additional oxidation–reduction reaction, and the adsorption process of K ions on active sites can be enhanced by regulating the S-doping amount and defect level. Especially, the best SPCS can obtain a prominent reversible charging capacity of 435.1 mA h g−1 at 50 mA g−1 over 100 cycles. In addition, in situ XRD characterization reveals that its lattice structure undergoes a disordered transformation without the expansion of interlayer spacing during the K-ion insertion process. This work demonstrates that rational regulation of doping engineering is of great significance for obtaining high-performance carbon anodes for KIBs.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Journal of Materials Chemistry A HOT Papers