| Literature DB >> 26634409 |
Lin Ma1, Houlong L Zhuang1, Shuya Wei1, Kenville E Hendrickson1, Mun Sek Kim1, Gil Cohn1, Richard G Hennig1, Lynden A Archer1.
Abstract
The rechargeable lithium-sulfur (Li-S) battery is an attractive platform for high-energy, low-cost electrochemical energy storage. Practical Li-S cells are limited by several fundamental issues, including the low conductivity of sulfur and its reduction compounds with Li and the dissolution of long-chain lithium polysulfides (LiPS) into the electrolyte. We report on an approach that allows high-performance sulfur-carbon cathodes to be designed based on tethering polyethylenimine (PEI) polymers bearing large numbers of amine groups in every molecular unit to hydroxyl- and carboxyl-functionalized multiwall carbon nanotubes. Significantly, for the first time we show by means of direct dissolution kinetics measurements that the incorporation of CNT-PEI hybrids in a sulfur cathode stabilizes the cathode by both kinetic and thermodynamic processes. Composite sulfur cathodes based the CNT-PEI hybrids display high capacity at both low and high current rates, with capacity retention rates exceeding 90%. The attractive electrochemical performance of the materials is shown by means of DFT calculations and physical analysis to originate from three principal sources: (i) specific and strong interaction between sulfur species and amine groups in PEI; (ii) an interconnected conductive CNT substrate; and (iii) the combination of physical and thermal sequestration of LiPS provided by the CNT=PEI composite.Entities:
Keywords: lithium−nitrile interactions; lithium−sulfur batteries; molecular sorbents; sequestering lithium polysulfide
Year: 2015 PMID: 26634409 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b06373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881