Sodium-ion batteries are commanding increasing attention owing to their promising electrochemical performance and sustainability. Organic electrode materials (OEMs) complement such technologies as they can be sourced from biomass and recycling them is environmentally friendly.
Organic anodes based on sodium carboxylates have exhibited immense potential, except the limitation of current synthesis methods concerning upscaling and energy costs. In this work, a rapid and energy efficient microwave-assisted synthesis for organic anodes is presented using sodium naphthalene-2,6-dicarboxylate as a model compound.
Optimizing the synthesis and electrode composition enables the compound to deliver a reversible initial capacity of approximate to 250 mAh g(-1) at a current density of 25 mA g(-1) with a high initial Coulombic efficiency (approximate to 78%). The capacity is stable over 400 cycles and the compound also exhibits good rate performance.
The successful demonstration of this rapid synthesis may facilitate the transition to preparing organic battery materials by scalable, efficient methods.