Rational Design and Modification Strategies of Pitch-Derived Carbon Anodes for Sodium-Ion Batteries
Abstract
Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) require low-cost and scalable anodes for large-scale energy storage, yet graphite shows limited Na-storage capability because of its narrow interlayer spacing and unfavorable Na+ intercalation. Pitch-derived carbon systems are attractive in this context because pitch is abundant, inexpensive, high carbon yield, and processable. However, direct carbonization of pitch usually promotes mesophase ordering and dense carbon frameworks, resulting in insufficient active sites, limited plateau capacity, and sluggish Na-storage kinetics. Focusing specifically on pitch-derived carbon systems, this review summarizes recent progress in pitch-derived carbon anodes for SIBs through four representative modification strategies: Porous-structure engineering, Molecular crosslinking, Heteroatom doping, and Composite carbon. These approaches enable the regulation of microstructure, pore architecture, defect distribution, and interfacial chemistry, thereby improving reversible capacity, initial Coulombic efficiency (ICE), rate capability, and cycling stability. We further discuss the remaining challenges and future directions for the rational design of pitch-derived carbon anodes for practical SIBs.
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