Abstract

Oxygen doping is an effective strategy for constructing high-performance carbon anodes in Na ion batteries; however, current oxygen-doped carbons always exhibit low doping levels and high-defect surfaces, resulting in limited capacity improvement and low initial Coulombic efficiency (ICE). Herein, a stainless steel-assisted high-energy ball milling is exploited to achieve high-level oxygen doping (19.33%) in the carbon framework. The doped oxygen atoms exist dominantly in the form of carbon-oxygen double bonds, supplying sufficient Na storage sites through an addition reaction. More importantly, it is unexpected that the random carbon layers on the surface are reconstructed into a quasi-ordered arrangement by robust mechanical force, which is low-defect and favorable for suppressing the formation of thick solid electrolyte interfaces. As such, the obtained carbon presents a large reversible capacity of 363mAhg-1 with a high ICE up to 83.1%. In addition, owing to the surface-dominated capacity contribution, an ultrafast Na storage is achieved that the capacity remains 139mAhg-1 under a large current density of 100Ag-1 . Such good Na storage performance, especially outstanding rate capability, has rarely been achieved before.

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