This is the first report of molybdenum carbide-based electrocatalyst for sulfur-based sodium-metal batteries. MoC/Mo C is in situ grown on nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes in parallel with formation of extensive nanoporosity. Sulfur impregnation (50 wt% S) results in unique triphasic architecture termed molybdenum carbide-porous carbon nanotubes host (MoC/Mo C@PCNT-S). Quasi-solid-state phase transformation to Na S is promoted in carbonate electrolyte, with in situ time-resolved Raman, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and optical analyses demonstrating minimal soluble polysulfides. MoC/Mo C@PCNT-S cathodes deliver among the most promising rate performance characteristics in the literature, achieving 987 mAh g at 1 A g , 818 mAh g at 3 A g , and 621 mAh g at 5 A g . The cells deliver superior cycling stability, retaining 650 mAh g after 1000 cycles at 1.5 A g , corresponding to 0.028% capacity decay per cycle. High mass loading cathodes (64 wt% S, 12.7 mg cm ) also show cycling stability. Density functional theory demonstrates that formation energy of Na S (1 ≤ x ≤ 4) on surface of MoC/Mo C is significantly lowered compared to analogous redox in liquid. Strong binding of Na S (1 ≤ x ≤ 4) on MoC/Mo C surfaces results from charge transfer between the sulfur and Mo sites on carbides' surface.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202106572 | DOI Listing |
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