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Mechanical Stress Reveals Asymmetry of Sodiation and Desodiation of Hard Carbon

ChemSusChem, September 2025, DOI. Login für Volltextzugriff.

Von Wiley-VCH zur Verfügung gestellt

Operando substrate curvature measurements are used to monitor the mechanical stress of hard carbon composite electrodes during sodiation and desodiation. The observed asymmetry of the electrode volume between sodiation and desodiation is explained by an interaction between sodium intercalation and pore filling: during pore filling, the sodium concentration in the transport paths is higher than during pore depletion.


Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) are an important and environmentally friendly drop-in technology for widespread lithium-ion batteries. Currently, hard carbon (HC) composite electrodes are considered to be the most promising anodes for commercial SIBs. Still, research is required to improve hard carbons to reduce irreversible losses during the first cycle and to gain a better understanding of how their structure correlates with their electrochemical performance. Herein, a HC composite electrode is investigated by operando substrate curvature measurements to determine mechanical stresses and infer volume changes during operation. These mechanical data in conjunction with electrochemistry are used to compare different reaction pathways proposed in the literature. It is observed that sodium loss in the first cycle does not lead to large changes in volume. The mechanical data agree with the model based on intercalation and pore filling. A strong asymmetry in the volume of the HC between sodiation and desodation is identified and explained by modifications of the model: intercalation and pore filling are mostly sequential, but both mechanisms interact so that sodium deposition into and dissolution from pores occur at different levels of intercalation.

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