Abstract
Iron-based polyanion material Na2Fe2(SO4)3has gained attention for sodium-ion batteries due to its excellent electrochemical performance and low cost. However, Na2Fe2(SO4)3suffers from residual FeSO4formation during synthesis, which limits its capacity and rate performance. Herein, we introduce a dual-phase engineering strategy by incorporating NaF during synthesis that effectively eliminates FeSO4residues and enables the formation of a dual-phase composite: Na2.56Fe1.72(SO4)3(primary phase) and Na3Fe2(SO4)3F (secondary phase). This dual-phase structure not only eliminates excess FeSO4but also enhances Na+diffusion by introducing abundant phase boundaries, leading to a superior electrochemical performance. The optimized Na2.375Fe2(SO4)3F0.375(NF-0.375) cathode achieves a high discharge capacity of 112 mAh g–1at 0.1 C, an exceptional rate capability of 82.9 mAh g–1at 30 C, and outstanding long-term stability, retaining 80% capacity after 10,000 cycles at 30 C. This dual-phase design provides a pathway for optimizing polyanion cathodes and accelerates the development of fast and durable SIBs for large-scale electric energy storage systems.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 29383-29391 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | ACS Nano |
| Volume | 19 |
| Issue number | 32 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 19 Aug 2025 |
Keywords
- NaFe(SO)
- NaFe(SO)F
- dual-phase engineering
- high-rate capability
- sodium-ion battery
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