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Nano-Space Engineering Enables Design of Closed-Pore Hard Carbons for Enhanced High-Capacity, High-Rate Sodium Storage

June 4, 2026
in Space
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Nano-Space Engineering Enables Design of Closed-Pore Hard Carbons for Enhanced High-Capacity, High-Rate Sodium Storage — Space

Nano-Space Engineering Enables Design of Closed-Pore Hard Carbons for Enhanced High-Capacity, High-Rate Sodium Storage

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In the ongoing quest for more sustainable, cost-effective energy storage solutions, sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) have emerged as a highly promising alternative to lithium-ion chemistries. The appeal of sodium lies not only in its relative abundance and low cost compared to lithium but also in its potential to power the next generation of energy storage devices. Despite these advantages, sodium-ion battery technology currently faces significant challenges, especially in achieving high energy and power densities that can rival lithium-ion systems. Central to overcoming these challenges is improving the anode material, where hard carbon (HC) presently stands as the most viable candidate. However, the practical performance of HC anodes has long been hampered by an incomplete understanding of sodium storage mechanisms within their structures.

Researchers at Zhengzhou University, spearheaded by Professors Jianhua Zhu and Yijun Cao, alongside collaborators including Run Ren and Ling Zhang, have recently unveiled a revolutionary strategy that addresses this knowledge gap and materially enhances HC anode performance. Their breakthrough lies in the design and synthesis of hard carbon structures featuring rationally engineered closed pores controlled on the nanoscale. This nano-space confinement method effectively governs the heterogeneous nucleation and growth of quasi-metallic sodium clusters within the anode’s graphitic pores, unlocking previously inaccessible sodium storage capacity while enhancing the rate capabilities critical for fast charging.

Traditional hard carbon anodes conventionally possess a network of closed pores, but only a fraction—approximately 60%—of these pores actively participate in sodium ion storage during battery operation. This limited utilization, combined with a well-documented trade-off between capacity achieved at the plateau region of the charge-discharge profile and the electrode’s rate performance, has constrained the adoption of SIBs in high-demand applications. The strategy introduced by the Zhengzhou team overcomes this bottleneck by coupling intercalation processes with pore filling in a stage-wise manner. The resulting mechanism allows for rapid ion transport reminiscent of supercapacitors while retaining the high capacity characteristic of intercalation-based storage.

At the core of this innovation is the meticulous synthesis of hard carbon materials through the controlled crosslinking of resorcinol-hexamethylenetetramine resins, followed by a carefully calibrated pyrolysis process at elevated temperatures. Through computational modeling using density functional theory (DFT) and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations, the researchers demonstrated that sodium storage behavior is fundamentally linked to the size and geometry of nanoconfined spaces within the anode. Decreasing the size of these nanocavities lowers the energy barrier for nucleation of sodium clusters; however, even small cavities alone cannot fully explain the charge storage unless the process of sodium-ion intercalation into narrow pore orifices (specifically within the 0.4 to 0.6 nm range) is incorporated.

This cleverly engineered pore size distribution enables a stepwise, pre-nucleation mechanism, where initial intercalation into the smallest pores activates the growth of sodium cluster formation in progressively larger pore volumes—up to approximately 2 nanometers in diameter—while maintaining a positive electrode potential (V > 0). The interconnected graphitic defects and localized disorder within the carbon matrix provide diffusion pathways that facilitate ion movement across the bulk material. This intricate pore architecture and its associated transport dynamics underpin the observed enhancements in both capacity and rate performance.

Experimental validation of these design principles yielded remarkable results. The optimized HC-1300 electrode exhibited a reversible sodium storage capacity approaching 500 milliamp-hours per gram (mAh g⁻¹), a figure that substantially exceeds earlier reports for hard carbon anodes. Even at ultrahigh current densities of 2000 mA g⁻¹, the electrode maintained 344 mAh g⁻¹, demonstrating exceptional rate capability. Furthermore, the material preserved 83.3% of its capacity after 1,000 charge-discharge cycles at 500 mA g⁻¹, confirming its excellent cycling stability. An equally impressive reversible capacity of 388.5 mAh g⁻¹ was achieved at an elevated areal loading of 3.7 mg cm⁻², marking strides toward practical, device-level implementation.

Beyond the anode itself, the team incorporated HC-1300 into full sodium-ion battery cells, pairing it with a Na₃V₂(PO₄)₃ cathode within coin-type configurations. These full cells delivered an average operating voltage of 3.25 volts and a normalized capacity of 447 mAh g⁻¹ based on the anode mass at a moderate current of 50 mA g⁻¹. Notably, the cells retained 83.9% of their initial capacity after 200 cycles, attesting to the compatibility and robustness of the integrated battery architecture.

Scaling up to practical energy storage devices, the researchers fabricated pouch cells incorporating commercial Na₄Fe₃(PO₄)₂P₂O₇ cathodes paired with their advanced HC anodes. These Na-ion pouch batteries achieved an impressive energy density of 147.4 watt-hours per kilogram (Wh kg⁻¹), rivaling or exceeding existing sodium-ion battery technologies. Additionally, the cells exhibited remarkable endurance, with a minimal capacity fade rate of merely 0.064% per cycle sustained over 700 cycles at 2000 mA charging current—a promising indication for long-term application in grid storage, electric vehicles, and portable electronics.

The success of this nano-space confinement approach can be attributed to the rational manipulation of the metallic sodium phase formation within hard carbon’s closed pores. By guiding nucleation and growth processes with precision, the researchers have devised a coupled intercalation and pore-filling storage mechanism, resulting in significantly enhanced sodium utilization. This discovery not only pushes the performance boundaries of sodium-ion batteries, positioning them closer to lithium-ion benchmarks, but also provides a versatile design platform that can be extended to other energy storage materials characterized by confined nanospaces.

Looking forward, the principles elucidated in this research set the stage for a new family of intercalation-pore filling materials, combining the high energy density of battery chemistries with the rapid charge-discharge capabilities traditionally associated with supercapacitors. The embedded nano-space confinement concept and stage-wise sodium cluster growth model offer a roadmap for developing next-generation SIBs that marry safety, cost-effectiveness, and high-rate performance.

This innovative work opens new horizons for fundamental and applied battery research, underscoring the vital role of precise nanoscale engineering in overcoming the intrinsic challenges of energy storage materials. As sodium-ion technologies continue to mature, breakthroughs such as this will be essential in enabling the widespread adoption of sustainable battery systems capable of meeting the accelerating demands of renewable energy integration, electric transportation, and portable power.

The Zhengzhou University team’s efforts represent a significant leap forward in hard carbon anode optimization, demonstrating how multi-disciplinary approaches integrating experimental synthesis, advanced characterization, and theoretical modeling can unlock hidden potential in established materials. Their findings hold valuable implications not only for academia but also for industry stakeholders pursuing commercially viable, high-performance sodium-ion batteries tailored for diverse energy storage applications worldwide.

Stay tuned as this pioneering research inspires future innovations that bring us closer to realizing the full promise of sodium-ion battery technology.


Subject of Research: Sodium-ion battery anode materials; nano-space confinement effects in hard carbons; high-capacity and high-rate sodium storage mechanisms.

Article Title: Nano‑Space Confinement Drives Rational Closed Pore Design in Hard Carbons for High‑Capacity and High‑Rate Sodium Storage

News Publication Date: 21-May-2026

Web References: DOI:10.1007/s40820-026-02223-7

Image Credits: Run Ren, Ling Zhang, Jianhua Zhu, Yunfeng Chao, Junlin Guo, Yijun Cao, Xiaobo Ji, Xinwei Cui

Tags: closed-pore hard carbonsenergy storage materialshard carbon anodeshigh-capacity sodium storagehigh-rate sodium storagenano-space engineeringnanoscale pore designquasi-metallic sodium clusterssodium ion batteriessodium storage mechanismssodium-ion battery challengessustainable energy storage
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