Abstract

Lithium–sulfur (Li–S) batteries are regarded as one of the most promising energy storage technologies, however, their practical application is greatly limited by a series of sulfur cathode challenges such as the notorious “shuttle effect”, low conductivity and large volume change. Here, we develop a facile hydrothermal method for the large scale synthesis of sulfur hosts consisting of three-dimensional graphene aerogel with tiny TiO2 nanoparticles (5–10 nm) uniformly dispersed on the graphene sheet (GA–TiO2). The obtained GA–TiO2 composites have a high surface area of ∼360 m2 g−1 and a hierarchical porous structure, which facilitates the encapsulation of sulfur in the carbon matrix. The resultant GA–TiO2/S composites exhibit a high initial discharge capacity of 810 mA h g−1 with an ultralow capacity fading of 0.054% per cycle over 700 cycles at 2C, and a high rate (5C) performance (396 mA h g−1). Such architecture design paves a new way to synthesize well-defined sulfur hosts to tackle the challenges for high performance Li–S batteries.

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