In modern society, flexible rechargeable batteries have become a burgeoning apodictic choice for wearable devices. Conventional lithium-sulfur batteries lack sufficient flexibility because their electrode materials are too rigid to bend. Along with the inherent high theoretical capacity of sulfur, lithium-sulfur batteries have some issues, such as dissolution and shuttle effect of polysulfides, which restricts their efficiency and practicability. Here, a flexible and "dead-weight"-free lithium-sulfur battery substrate with a three-dimensional structure was prepared by a simple strategy. With the cooperative assistance of carbon nanotubes and graphene attached to cotton fibers, the lithium-sulfur battery with 2.0 mg cm sulfur provided a high initial discharge capacity of 1098.7 mA h g at 1C, and the decay rate after 300 cycles was only 0.046% per cycle. The initial discharge capacity at 2C was 872.4 mA h g and the capacity was maintained 734.4 mA h g after 200 cycles with only a 0.079% per cycle decay rate.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9042837PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra06568hDOI Listing

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