Abstract

Although lithium‐sulfur batteries have a high theoretical energy density that is higher than lithium‐ion batteries, their development is limited by the slow kinetics of lithium polysulfide conversion. In this research, we utilize the excellent bidirectional catalysis and adsorption of lithium polysulfide by the bimetallic oxide Co3V2O8 composite carbon hollow sphere to address the kinetic obstacle of lithium‐sulfur battery. On the one hand, the carbon hollow sphere substrate provides a cavity that can hold a large amount of sulfur. On the other hand, it can limit the diffusion of lithium polysulfide by van der Waals forces. The combination of the above two points improves the capacity and stability of lithium‐sulfur batteries. It has a specific capacity of 1237.2 mAh g‐1 at 0.2 C current density and retains 603 mAh g‐1 after 100 cycles. At a high current density of 2 C, the specific capacity is 976.2 mAh g‐1. After 1000 cycles, it holds at 338.3 mAh g‐1, and the capacity retention rate per cycle is 99.89%. This work discovers the new potential of Co3V2O8 as an electrocatalyst and proposes a process that can widely prepare carbon materials with complex uniform distribution of electrocatalysts to achieve high specific capacity of lithium‐sulfur batteries.

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