4.8 Article

In Situ TEM Studies of Sodium Polysulfides Electrochemistry in High Temperature Na-S Nanobatteries

Journal

SMALL
Volume 17, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202100846

Keywords

carbon corrosion; high temperature sodium– sulfur batteries; in situ TEM; MEMS heating device; sodium polysulfides

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFB0104300]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52022088, 51971245, 51772262, 21406191, 21935009, U20A20336]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province [B2020203037, B2018203297]
  4. Fok Ying-Tong Education Foundation of China [171064]
  5. Beijing Natural Science Foundation of China-Haidian Special Project [L182065]
  6. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [2202046]
  7. Youth Top-notch Talent Support Program of Higher Education in Hebei Province [BJ2016053]
  8. High-Level Talents Research Program of the Yanshan University [00500021502, 005000201]
  9. Postgraduate Innovation Projects of Hebei Province of China [CXZZBS2020057]
  10. Hunan Innovation Team [2018RS3091]

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In-situ transmission electron microscopy with a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) heating device was used to investigate electrochemical reactions in HT-Na-S batteries, revealing that the sulfur cathode is fully discharged to Na2S rather than Na2S2 at high temperatures, with swift and highly reversible electrochemical reactions.
Understanding polysulfide electrochemistry in high temperature sodium-sulfur (HT-Na-S) batteries is crucial for their practical applications. Currently the discharge capacity of commercial HT-Na-S battery achieves only one third of its theoretical capacity due to polysulfides formation, understanding of which is limited due to technical difficulty in direct imaging polysulfides. Herein, in situ transmission electron microscopy implemented with a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) heating device is used to investigate the electrochemical reactions of HT-Na-S batteries. The formation and evolution of transient polysulfides during cycling are revealed in real-time. Upon discharge, sulfur transforms to long-chain polysulfides, short-chain polysulfides, and finally Na2S or its mixture with polysulfides, and the process is reversible during charge at high temperatures. Surprisingly, by introducing nanovoids into the sulfur cathode to buffer the large volume change thus preserving the integrity of the electronic/ionic pathways and reducing the diffusion distance of Na+ ions, the sulfur cathode is fully discharged to Na2S rather than the conventionally observed Na2S2 at 300 degrees C. Moreover, the electrochemical reaction is swift and highly reversible. The in situ studies provide not only new understanding to the polysulfide electrochemistry, but also critical strategies to boost the capacity and cyclability of HT-Na-S batteries for large-scale energy storage applications.

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