Abstract

Lithium-sulfur battery suffers from the low utilization of sulfur and the high electrolyte/sulfur (E/S) ratio that decrease the cell-based performance. Lithium polysulfides (Li2Sx)-dissolved electrolyte, so called catholyte, enables high utilization of sulfur, but the cell inherently has high E/S ratio due to the limited solubility of Li2Sx. Herein, a composite electrode of Li2Sx (x = 4, 6, 8) and sub-millimeter-long few-wall carbon nanotube (CNT) is proposed. The CNT forms self-supporting sponge-like paper and works as a three-dimensional current collector, in which the Li2Sx is deposited by solution casting and drying. The Li2S6-CNT electrode realizes high specific capacity (1249 mAh gsulfur−1) under a lean electrolyte condition of E/S = 4 μL mgsulfur−1, which is much better than the S8-CNT electrode (233 mAh gsulfur−1). After full charge and conversion of Li2Sx to S, the Li2Sx-CNT electrode maintains its high capacity of 1100 mAh gsulfur−1. The full cell with the Li2S6-CNT and the Li thin foil electrodes realizes 400–500 Wh kgcell−1 for E/S = 4.0 at the 2nd and 3rd discharge and 300 Wh kgcell−1 for E/S = 5.8 at the 97th discharge, based on the total mass of the interior of a cell (electrodes, separator, and electrolyte). Holding solvated Li2Sx by the CNT sponge is the key for the high energy density.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call