1 research outputs found
Effective Trapping of Lithium Polysulfides Using a Functionalized Carbon Nanotube-Coated Separator for Lithium–Sulfur Cells with Enhanced Cycling Stability
The
critical issues that hinder the practical applications of lithium–sulfur
batteries, such as dissolution and migration of lithium polysulfides,
poor electronic conductivity of sulfur and its discharge products,
and low loading of sulfur, have been addressed by designing a functional
separator modified using hydroxyl-functionalized carbon nanotubes
(CNTOH). Density functional theory calculations and experimental results
demonstrate that the hydroxyl groups in the CNTOH provoked strong
interaction with lithium polysulfides and resulted in effective trapping
of lithium polysulfides within the sulfur cathode side. The reduction
in migration of lithium polysulfides to the lithium anode resulted
in enhanced stability of the lithium electrode. The conductive nature
of CNTOH also aided to efficiently reutilize the adsorbed reaction
intermediates for subsequent cycling. As a result, the lithium–sulfur
cell assembled with a functional separator exhibited a high initial
discharge capacity of 1056 mAh g<sup>–1</sup> (corresponding
to an areal capacity of 3.2 mAh cm<sup>–2</sup>) with a capacity
fading rate of 0.11% per cycle over 400 cycles at 0.5 C rate