The sluggish kinetics and shuttle effect of lithium polysulfide intermediates are the major issues that retard the practical applications of lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries. Herein, we introduce a defect engineering strategy to construct a defected-UiO-66-NH-4/graphene electrocatalytic membrane (D-UiO-66-NH-4/G EM) which could accelerate the conversion of lithium polysulfides in high sulfur loadings and low electrolyte/sulfur (E/S) ratio Li-S batteries. Metal-organic frameworks (UiO-66-NH) can be directionally chemical engraved to form concave octahedra with abundant defects. According to electrocatalytic kinetics and DFT calculations studies, the D-UiO-66-NH-4 architecture effectively provides ample sites to capture polysulfides strong chemical affinity and effectively delivers electrocatalytic activity of polysulfide conversion. As a result, a Li-S battery with such an electrocatalytic membrane delivers a high capacity of 12.3 mAh cm (1013 mAh g) at a sulfur loading up to 12.2 mg· cm under a lean electrolyte condition (E/S = 5 μL mg-sulfur) at 2.1 mA cm (0.1 C). Moreover, a prototype soft package battery also exhibits excellent cycling stability with a maintained capacity of 996 mAh g upon 100 cycles.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.1c05585 | DOI Listing |
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