Facilitating redox kinetics of sulfur species by cobalt-nitrogen co-doped porous hollow carbon for high-performance Li-S battery
Author(s) -
Bihan Liu,
Zilong Wu,
Nadia Ismail,
Zhuo Chen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/781/5/052034
Subject(s) - polysulfide , sulfur , cobalt , catalysis , carbon fibers , redox , chemical engineering , adsorption , inorganic chemistry , chemistry , cobalt sulfide , lithium–sulfur battery , lithium (medication) , chemisorption , materials science , electrolyte , electrode , organic chemistry , electrochemistry , composite material , composite number , medicine , engineering , endocrinology
The shuttle effect of polysulfides is the main obstacle restricting the development of lithium-sulfur batteries. However, most efforts focused on physical adsorption and polar adsorption cannot fundamentally solve the problem of sluggish conversion of polysulfides, especially for high sulfur loading. Herein, a cobalt-nitrogen co-doped porous hollow carbon sphere (Co-CN) is synthesized in one step. The porous conductive carbon spheres can realize a rapid charge transfer, mitigate volume expansion during cycling and enhanced physical adsorption for polysulfides. Nitrogen and cobalt doping provide chemisorption and catalysis for the restriction and conversion of polysulfides. Furthermore, liquid Li 2 S 8 polysulfide was used as sulfur source to guarantee high sulfur loading and fast redox kinetic. Benefiting from the triple effect of physical adsorption, chemical adsorption and catalysis, the Co-CN@Li 2 S 8 cell with sulfur loading of 5.15 mg cm −2 delivers a high reversible initial capacity of 1499 mAhg −1 at 0.1C and 880.9 mAhg −1 after 100 cycles. More excitingly, the capacity decay rate was only 0.012% per cycle at 1C over 1000 cycles, indicating excellent long cycle stability. This work provides a facile and effective route for Co-CN as a sulfur host in lithium-sulfur battery.
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