4.8 Article

Redox Catalytic and Quasi-Solid Sulfur Conversion for High-Capacity Lean Lithium Sulfur Batteries

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages 14540-14548

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b08516

Keywords

Li-S battery; lean electrolyte; polysulfide absorption; redox catalysis; quasi-solid conversion; N/P ratio

Funding

  1. Northern Illinois University
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  3. Northern Illinois University's Molecular Analysis Core Facility

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The practical deployment of lithium sulfur batteries demands stable cycling of high loading and dense sulfur cathodes under lean electrolyte conditions, which is very difficult to realize. We describe here a strategy of fabricating extremely dense sulfur cathodes, designed by integrating Mo6S8 nanoparticles as a multi-functional mediator with a Li-ion conducting binder and a high-performance Fe3O4@N-carbon sulfur host. The Mo6S8 nanoparticles have substantially faster Li-ion insertion kinetics compared with sulfur, and the produced LixMo6S8 particles have spontaneous redox reactivity with relevant polysulfide species (such as Li4Mo6S8 + Li2S4 <-> Li3Mo6S8 + Li2S, Delta G = -84 kJ mol(-1)), which deliver a true redox catalytic sulfur conversion mechanism. In addition, LixMo6S8 particles strongly absorb polysulfide during battery cycling, which provides a quasi-solid sulfur conversion pathway and almost eliminated polysulfide dissolution. Such a pathway not only promotes growth of uniform Li2S that can be readily charged back with nearly no overpotential, but also mitigates the polysulfide-induced Li metal corrosion issue. The combination of these benefits enables stable and high capacity cycling of dense sulfur cathodes under a low electrolyte to sulfur ratio (4.2 mu L mg(-1)), as demonstrated with cathodes with volumetric capacities of at least 1.3 Ah cm(-3) and capacity retentions of similar to 80% for 300 cycles. Furthermore, stable cycling of batteries under a practically relevant N/P ratio of 2.4 is also demonstrated.

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