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Expanded Nanofibrous Cellulose Electrode Binder: Declustering Lithium Polysulfides for Lean‐Electrolyte Li‒S Batteries
Author(s) -
Moon Hyunseok,
Kim JungHui,
Yao Nan,
Ryou MyeongHwa,
Chen Xiang,
Park Yeonju,
Han SunPhil,
Bak Cheol,
Kang Hyunseo,
Lee Yong Min,
Jung Young Mee,
Zhang Qiang,
Lee SangYoung
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.202414335
Subject(s) - electrolyte , materials science , cellulose , cathode , chemical engineering , lithium (medication) , nanofiber , sulfur , electrode , energy density , nanotechnology , chemistry , metallurgy , medicine , engineering , endocrinology , physics , theoretical physics
Abstract Despite their potential as an alternative to commercial lithium (Li)‒ion batteries, Li–sulfur (Li–S) batteries face challenges related to energy density limitations caused by the considerable amount of electrolyte required. Lean electrolytes have proven effective in mitigating this issue. However, they tend to exacerbate Li polysulfides (LiPS) clustering, resulting in incomplete S utilization and sluggish conversion kinetics. Here, 2,2,6,6‐tetramethylpiperidin‐1‐oxyl radical (TEMPO)‐oxidized cellulose nanofiber (TOCN) is presented as an expanded nanofibrous electrode binder for lean‐electrolyte Li‒S batteries. Owing to its 1D fibrous structure and expanded inter‐glucose chain distance, the TOCN binder offers more accessible active sites for intermolecular interactions with LiPS. Consequently, LiPS cluster formation is effectively suppressed even at a low TOCN binder content of 1 wt%, while a high S loading of 72 wt% is achieved. The resulting S cathode with the TOCN binder enables Li‒S cells to exhibit a remarkable specific capacity of 1221 mAh g sulfur −1 under constrained electrolyte conditions (low electrolyte‐to‐sulfur ratio of 2.0 µL mg sulfur −1 and low density of 0.927 g mL −1 ), yielding a high cell‐level energy density of 503 Wh kg −1 that surpasses those of previously reported S cathodes based on conventional synthetic polymer binders.
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