In Situ Constructing a Catalytic Shell for Sulfur Cathode via Electrochemical Oxidative Polymerization.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

Department of Chemistry, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Collaborative Innovation Centre of Chemistry for Energy Materials (iChEM) and State Key Laboratory of Physical Chemistry of Solid Surfaces, Xiamen University, Xiamen361005, Fujian, China.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries face issues like sluggish reaction kinetics and the shuttle effect of lithium polysulfides, which hinder their development.
  • The study introduces a catalytic shell for the sulfur cathode created using hexafluorocyclotriphosphene (HFPN) to reduce the shuttle effect and improve sulfur conversion efficiency.
  • This innovative shell enhances Li-S battery performance, showing excellent stability and a minimal capacity decay rate of 0.034% over 700 cycles, while achieving a high capacity of 517 mAh/g at increased discharge rates.

Article Abstract

Sluggish multiphase reaction kinetics and severe shuttle effect of lithium polysulfides (LiPSs) are two major challenges facing lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries, which largely prevent them from becoming a reality. Herein, a shell with catalytic function for sulfur cathode is in situ constructed through an ingenious electrochemical oxidative polymerization strategy by introducing hexafluorocyclotriphosphazene (HFPN) as additives, which suppresses the shuttle effect and promotes efficient sulfur conversion. The shell with abundant heteroatoms effectively confines polysulfides to the cathode matrix by chemically interacting with them to eliminate capacity degradation. Moreover, the shell exhibits high catalytic activities, which turns LiS into an activated state and facilitates its dissociation. The functionalized shell substantially advances the performance of Li-S batteries, thanks to efficient lithium-ion transportation and abundant adsorption-catalytic sites. As a result, Li-S batteries demonstrate superb resistance to self-discharge, ultrastable cycle performance, and greatly enhanced rate capability. Impressively, the batteries show an ultralow capacity decay rate of 0.034% throughout 700 cycles at 2C. They deliver a capacity of 517 mAh g even at a 4C rate, exhibiting relieved electrochemical polarization and excellent sulfur utilization. This work provides an ingenious strategy to construct adsorption-catalytic nets for next-generation Li-S batteries with enhanced lifespan and electrochemical performance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c18695DOI Listing

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