Abstract

All Solid-state Lithium-Sulfur battery (ASSLSB) possesses a great promise in providing a safe, high energy density, and low cost battery technology for vehicle electrification and grid energy storage. To achieve practically high specific energy in ASSLSB (e.g., >400 Wh/Kg), sulfur cathodes with high areal capacity (>6 mAh cm-2) are essentially needed to offset the relatively low working voltage of elemental sulfur cathode (1.9 V vs. Li). This requires high mass loading sulfur cathodes by maximizing both sulfur content in the whole electrode and sulfur utilization rate to reduce the parasitic weights. An optimal electrode architecture featuring sufficiently connected sulfur/solid electrolyte/carbon triple interfaces is desired to enable sulfur’s fast accessibility to electron and Li-ion simultaneously. Due to the non-flowability of those three solid components, however, it is very hard to maximize the contact of trip solid phases, which need new insights of the materials design and processing technology.This work looks at carbon microstructures and their impact on triple-point contact between electrochemically active sulfur, carbon, and the solid-state electrolyte (SSE) that comprises most composite cathodes in ASSLSB systems. While significant work has gone into understanding and developing novel carbon host structures for liquid Li-S cells for improving sulfur utilization, polysulfide trapping, better understanding is needed for ASSLSBs. Specifically, how sulfur infiltration, loading, and spatial distribution within the porous carbon host impacts sulfur utilization. Understanding how the infiltrated sulfur that resides in the porous carbon host connects with both carbon and solid electrolyte networks across the whole electrode structure and maintains its robustness during the repeated cell cycling is needed to achieve full utilization in high sulfur loading electrodes. The solid sulfur cathode system examined in the present study is a composite of porous carbon, sulfur, and a sulfide-based solid electrolyte. A combination of porous carbon hosts is investigated and correlated to the cell performance at practical conditions. Advanced characterization and computational tools are used to further elucidate the key parameters for high sulfur utilization in ASSLSBs with high sulfur loading cathodes. Details of the study will be presented and discussed at the meeting.Reference:(1) Nagata, H. and Y. Chikusa (2016). "All-Solid-State Lithium–Sulfur Battery with High Energy and Power Densities at the Cell Level." Energy Technology 4(4): 484-489(2) Banerjee, A., et al. (2020). "Interfaces and Interphases in All-Solid-State Batteries with Inorganic Solid Electrolytes." Chemical Reviews 120(14): 6878-6933.

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