This study demonstrates that coating the sodium-ion battery (SIB) material Na
3V
2(PO
4)
3 (NVP) with a thin layer of niobium oxide (Nb
2O
5) dramatically improves its efficiency, lifespan, and safety. These improvements have significant energy and environmental implications. SIBs are a promising alternative to lithium-ion technology because sodium is far more abundant and inexpensive. NVP is attractive for SIBs due to its stable structure and good ion conductivity, but its rate capability and cycling stability are limited by slow charge transfer and interfacial degradation. The authors synthesized NVP/C via a citric-acid sol–gel method and applied 1–5 wt% Nb
2O
5 coatings using a simple impregnation process. Structural and spectroscopic analyses (XRD, TEM, Raman, XPS) confirmed uniform Nb
2O
5 coatings without altering NVP’s crystallinity. Electrochemical testing showed that the 3 wt% Nb
2O
5 coating achieved the best balance of capacity, rate performance, and cycling life, maintaining 97% capacity after 300 cycles and an energy density of 307 Wh kg⁻¹. The Nb
2O
5 layer reduced charge-transfer resistance, enhanced surface capacitance, and acted as a hydrofluoric acid (HF) scavenger—forming NbF₅ at the interface, which improved stability. Even under −15 °C to 60 °C, coated electrodes maintained over 90% of their initial capacity. Overall, Nb
2O
5 surface modification effectively enhances the kinetics, durability, and safety of NVP cathodes, offering a practical route toward high-performance, low-cost sodium-ion batteries. This work entitled “
Unlocking the performance of sodium-ion batteries by coating Na3V2(PO4)3 with Nb2O5” was published on
Acta Physico-Chimica Sinica (published on September 9, 2025).
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