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Composite of activated carbon derived from coconut shell with sulfur as a high-performance cathode for β"-alumina-based sodium solid-state batteries

Authors
Putri, Denis Octareta AmeliaHidayat, YuniawanLee, YounkiNurohmah, Anisa RadityaNazarudinDegirmenci, VolkanRahmawati, Fitria
Issue Date
Jun-2025
Publisher
SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
Keywords
Activated carbon-sulfur composite; Coconut shell; beta ''-Alumina; Solid-state sodium battery
Citation
Chemical Papers, v.79, no.6, pp 4001 - 4017
Pages
17
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Chemical Papers
Volume
79
Number
6
Start Page
4001
End Page
4017
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/78186
DOI
10.1007/s11696-025-04051-2
ISSN
2585-7290
1336-9075
Abstract
A novel activated carbon/sulfur (AC/S) composite cathode was synthesized from coconut shell charcoal through a thermal treatment method, with a sulfur-to-activated carbon (S/AC) mass ratio of 5:1. The AC/S composite displayed broad diffraction peaks at 2 theta = 23.03 degrees and 2 theta = 43.45 degrees, indicating an amorphous carbon structure. Morphology analysis revealed a dense, pore-free structure with particle sizes ranging from 50 to 200 nm. Meanwhile, TEM analysis revealed sulfur encapsulation within a carbon matrix, with encapsulated particle sizes ranging from 10 to 20 nm. FTIR analysis confirmed C-S bonding with characteristic vibrations at 1189.17 cm(-)1, supported by Raman peak at 996.08 cm(-)1 and XPS signals at 164.03 eV and 165.21 eV. The composite exhibited a high electronic conductivity of 1.11 x 10<^> (- 1) S cm-1. Electrochemical performance tests of the AC/S composite as a cathode in an all-solid-state sodium battery (AC/S | PTFE-beta"-Al2O3 | Na) demonstrated promising initial charge and discharge capacities of 553.01 mAh/g and 331.9 mAh/g, respectively. Cycle stability tests further showed a Coulombic efficiency of 74% and capacity retention of 22.33% over 150 cycles, highlighting the composite's potential for sustainable, high-capacity sodium storage applications.
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