Abstract

Graphite has become a critical material because of its high supply risk and essential applications in energy industries. Its present synthesis still relies on an energy-intensive thermal treatment pathway (Acheson process) at about 3000 °C. Herein, a mechanochemical approach is demonstrated to afford highly crystalline graphite nanosheets at ambient temperature. The key to the success of our methodology lies in the successive decomposition and rearrangement of a carbon nitride framework driven by a denitriding reaction in the presence of magnesium. The afforded graphite features high crystallinity, a high degree of graphitization, a thin nanosheet architecture, and a small flake size, which endow it with superior efficiency in lithium-ion batteries as an anode material in terms of rate capacity and cycle stability. The mild and cost-effective pathway used in this study could be a promising alternative for graphite production.

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