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1.
Adv Mater ; 31(25): e1901220, 2019 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31062911

RESUMO

Lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries with high sulfur loading are urgently required in order to take advantage of their high theoretical energy density. Ether-based Li-S batteries involve sophisticated multistep solid-liquid-solid-solid electrochemical reaction mechanisms. Recently, studies on Li-S batteries have widely focused on the initial solid (sulfur)-liquid (soluble polysulfide)-solid (Li2 S2 ) conversion reactions, which contribute to the first 50% of the theoretical capacity of the Li-S batteries. Nonetheless, the sluggish kinetics of the solid-solid conversion from solid-state intermediate product Li2 S2 to the final discharge product Li2 S (corresponding to the last 50% of the theoretical capacity) leads to the premature end of discharge, resulting in low discharge capacity output and low sulfur utilization. To tackle the aforementioned issue, a catalyst of amorphous cobalt sulfide (CoS3 ) is proposed to decrease the dissociation energy of Li2 S2 and propel the electrochemical transformation of Li2 S2 to Li2 S. The CoS3 catalyst plays a critical role in improving the sulfur utilization, especially in high-loading sulfur cathodes (3-10 mg cm-2 ). Accordingly, the Li2 S/Li2 S2 ratio in the discharge products increased to 5.60/1 from 1/1.63 with CoS3 catalyst, resulting in a sulfur utilization increase of 20% (335 mAh g-1 ) compared to the counterpart sulfur electrode without CoS3 .

2.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 5873, 2017 07 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28724975

RESUMO

We have studied temperature-induced superionic phase transition in Li2S, which is one of the most promising Li-S battery cathode material. Concentration of ionic carriers at low and high temperature was evaluated from thermodynamics of defects (using density functional theory) and detailed balance condition (using ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD)), respectively. Diffusion coefficients were also obtained using AIMD simulations. Calculated ionic conductivity shows that superionic phase transition occurs at T = 900 K, which is in agreement with reported experimental values. The superionic behavior of Li2S is found to be due to thermodynamic reason (i.e. a large concentration of disordered defects).

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