Publication | Closed Access
Longevous Sodium Metal Anodes with High Areal Capacity Enabled by 3D-Printed Sodiophilic Monoliths
69
Citations
57
References
2023
Year
Sodium metal anode, featured by favorable redox voltage and material availability, offers a feasible avenue toward high-energy-density devices. However, uneven metal deposition and notorious dendrite proliferation synchronously hamper its broad application prospects. Here, a three-dimensional (3D) porous hierarchical silver/reduced graphene oxide (Ag/rGO) microlattice aerogel is devised as a sodiophilic monolith, which is realized by a direct ink writing 3D printing technology. The thus-printed Na@Ag/rGO electrode retains a durable cycling lifespan over 3100 h at 3.0 mA cm<sup>-2</sup>/1.0 mAh cm<sup>-2</sup>, concurrently harvesting a high average Coulombic efficiency of 99.80%. Impressively, it can be cycled for 340 h at a stringent condition of 6.0 mA cm<sup>-2</sup> with a large areal capacity of 60.0 mAh cm<sup>-2</sup> (∼1036.31 mAh g<sup>-1</sup>). Meanwhile, the well-regulated Na ion flux and uniform deposition kinetics are systematically probed by comprehensive electroanalytical analysis and theoretical simulations. As a result, assembled Na metal full battery delivers a long cycling sustainability over 500 cycles at 100 mA g<sup>-1</sup> with a low per-cycle decay of 0.85%. The proposed strategy might inspire the construction of high-capacity Na metal anodes with appealing stability.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1