large size of sodium-ions, there are also uniqueness in the development of SIB materials and the tuning of electrodeelectrolyte interphases, etc. [3] One of the most representative examples is that the intercalation of sodium-ion in graphite is thermodynamically inhibited by the interlayer distance, whereas the lithium-ion intercalation is favorable. [1,3] Hard carbon (HC) with expanded interlayer distance was investigated as the-state-of-the-art anode that allows sodium-ion storage via pore absorption, defect binding, and intercalation into the turbostratic graphenic nanodomains. [4][5][6][7] HC structure and the unique ion storage mechanism inevitably induce more reduction decomposition of the electrolyte, solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation, ion trapping, and hence lead to worse Coulombic efficiency than graphite. [8] Delicate control of the HC defects and surface area is therefore particularly required. [5,9] It is known that the electrochemical reversibility and the rate and life performance of LIBs and SIBs are to a great extent dictated by the SEI formation and its chemical/electrochemical reactivity and stability. [5,10,11] Concerning this, attempts also have been made to tune the SEI coverage, thickness, stability, and ionic conductivity, etc., by developing novel electrolytes or electrolyte additives that decompose preferentially to form SEI or tailoring the surface area and physiochemical properties of the carbon materials. [10][11][12][13] Ether-based electrolyte has been extensively used in lithium-air and lithiumsulfur batteries. [14,15] The solvent-in-salt electrolyte design also has expanded the application of ether electrolyte to LIBs with graphite anodes and high-voltage cathodes. [16,17] In SIBs, ether
Hard carbon (HC) is the state-of-the-art anode material for sodium-ion batteries (SIBs). However, its performance has been plagued by the limited initialCoulombic efficiency (ICE) and mediocre rate performance. Here, experimental and theoretical studies are combined to demonstrate the application of lithium-pretreated HC (LPHC) as high-performance anode materials for SIBs by manipulating the solid electrolyte interphase in tetraglyme (TEGDME)-based electrolyte. The LPHC in TEGDME can 1) deliver > 92% ICE and ≈220 mAh g −1 specific capacity, twice of the capacity (≈100 mAh g −1 ) in carbonate electrolyte; 2) achieve > 85% capacity retention over 1000 cycles at 1000 mA g −1 current density (4 C rate, 1 C = 250 mA g −1 ) with a specific capacity of ≈150 mAh g −1 , ≈15 times of the capacity (10 mAh g −1 ) in carbonate. The full cell of Na 3 V 2 (PO 4 ) 3 -LPHC in TEGDME demonstrated close to theoretical specific capacity of ≈98 mAh g −1 based on Na 3 V 2 (PO 4 ) 3 cathode, ≈2.5 times of the value (≈40 mAh g −1 ) with nontreated HC. This work provides new perception on the anode development for SIBs.