Abstract

BackgroundSodium is pervasive and enormous compared to that of lithium. SIBs have turned out to be factual competitors to LIBs besides storage purposes, the power battery technology intended for electric vehicle transport. The choice of selecting SIBs is effective due to their alluring properties of biomaterials for synthesizing electrode materials. Hard carbon, (HC) owing to its amorphous and highly porous nature of the material leads to the intercalation/deintercalation of sodium ions. MethodsIn this work, the sea sponge (SS) was carbonized by the chemical-activating pyrolysis method. The as-prepared HCs using different chemical activating agents (KOH, NaOH, ZnCl2) reveals the diversified sodium-ion storage behaviors. Significant findingsSS attained a charge capacity of 347.39 mAh g−1 at a 0.1 C rate. The half maximal (IC50) of sea sponge-derived hard carbon was found to be 11.5, 11.4, 10.7 μg/mL against breast cancer cells (MDA MB - 231). The present work communally addressed the potential anode material and effective cancerous activity of sea sponge-derived hard carbon material.

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