| Literature DB >> 28146627 |
Wuxing Hua1, Zhi Yang1, Huagui Nie1, Zhongyu Li1, Jizhang Yang1, Zeqing Guo1, Chunping Ruan1, Xi'an Chen1, Shaoming Huang1.
Abstract
Lithium-sulfur batteries have become an appealing candidate for next-generation energy-storage technologies because of their low cost and high energy density. However, one of their major practical problems is the high solubility of long-chain lithium polysulfides and their infamous shuttle effect, which causes low Coulombic efficiency and sulfur loss. Here, we introduced a concept involving the dithiothreitol (DTT) assisted scission of polysulfides into lithium-sulfur system. Our designed porous carbon nanotube/S cathode coupling with a lightweight graphene/DTT interlayer (PCNTs-S@Gra/DTT) exhibited ultrahigh cycle-ability even at 5 C over 1100 cycles, with a capacity degradation rate of 0.036% per cycle. Additionally, the PCNTs-S@Gra/DTT electrode with a 3.51 mg cm-2 sulfur mass loading delivered a high initial areal capacity of 5.29 mAh cm-2 (1509 mAh g-1) at current density of 0.58 mA cm-2, and the reversible areal capacity of the cell was maintained at 3.45 mAh cm-2 (984 mAh g-1) over 200 cycles at a higher current density of 1.17 mA cm-2. Employing this molecule scission principle offers a promising avenue to achieve high-performance lithium-sulfur batteries.Entities:
Keywords: dithiothreitol; interlayer; lithium−sulfur batteries; polysulfide-scission; porous carbon nanotube
Year: 2017 PMID: 28146627 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b08627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881