Active Sodium Loss in Practical Anode-Free Sodium Batteries: Mechanisms, Challenges, and Strategies

Abstract

Anode-free sodium metal batteries (AFSBs) offer a compelling route toward high-energy and sustainable electrochemical storage by eliminating excess sodium and inactive anode hosts. Yet their practical viability is fundamentally limited by rapid and irreversible active sodium loss. In anode-free architectures, cyclable sodium is the governing "currency" of cell lifetime: any interfacial irreversibility directly translates into catastrophic capacity decay. Unlike lithium systems, sodium depletion in AFSBs is driven by Na-specific physicochemical constraints-including a large ionic radius, low melting point, extreme volumetric expansion (≈260%), and intrinsically fragile solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) mechanics-giving rise to distinct degradation pathways spanning sparse nucleation, porous growth, dynamic SEI fracture-repassivation, thermally induced morphology collapse, and coupled cathode-anode inventory feedback. This review establishes a multiscale mechanistic framework linking intrinsic sodium properties to cell-level failure, and critically assesses emerging mitigation strategies across sodiophilic current-collector engineering, multifunctional interphase design, sodium supplementation, and operation-protocol optimization. By integrating these approaches within a "source-process-inventory-environment" regulation paradigm, we outline key design rules and future priorities required to suppress sodium depletion and accelerate the translation of AFSBs from laboratory concepts to practical high-energy batteries.

Transparent peer review

To support increased transparency, we offer authors the option to publish the peer review history alongside their article.

View this article’s peer review history

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
04 Feb 2026
Accepted
25 Mar 2026
First published
25 Mar 2026

Energy Environ. Sci., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Active Sodium Loss in Practical Anode-Free Sodium Batteries: Mechanisms, Challenges, and Strategies

S. Qiu, H. Zhu, J. Xie and S. Cheng, Energy Environ. Sci., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6EE00760K

To request permission to reproduce material from this article, please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

If you are an author contributing to an RSC publication, you do not need to request permission provided correct acknowledgement is given.

If you are the author of this article, you do not need to request permission to reproduce figures and diagrams provided correct acknowledgement is given. If you want to reproduce the whole article in a third-party publication (excluding your thesis/dissertation for which permission is not required) please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

Read more about how to correctly acknowledge RSC content.

Social activity

Spotlight

Advertisements