Implanting Atomic Cobalt within Mesoporous Carbon toward Highly Stable Lithium–Sulfur Batteries

  • Jin Xie
  • , Bo Quan Li
  • , Hong Jie Peng
  • , Yun Wei Song
  • , Meng Zhao
  • , Xiao Chen
  • , Qiang Zhang
  • , Jia Qi Huang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

366 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Lithium–sulfur (Li–S) batteries hold great promise to serve as next-generation energy storage devices. However, the practical performances of Li–S batteries are severely limited by the sulfur cathode regarding its low conductivity, huge volume change, and the polysulfide shuttle effect. The first two issues have been well addressed by introducing mesoporous carbon hosts to the sulfur cathode. Unfortunately, the nonpolar nature of carbon materials renders poor affinity to polar polysulfides, leaving the shuttling issue unaddressed. In this contribution, atomic cobalt is implanted within the skeleton of mesoporous carbon via a supramolecular self-templating strategy, which simultaneously improves the interaction with polysulfides and maintains the mesoporous structure. Moreover, the atomic cobalt dopants serve as active sites to improve the kinetics of the sulfur redox reactions. With the atomic-cobalt-decorated mesoporous carbon host, a high capacity of 1130 mAh gS −1 at 0.5 C and a high stability with a retention of 74.1% after 300 cycles are realized. Implanting atomic metal in mesoporous carbon demonstrates a feasible strategy to endow nanomaterials with targeted functions for Li–S batteries and broad applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1903813
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume31
Issue number43
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2019

Keywords

  • atomic doping
  • lithium–sulfur batteries
  • mesoporous carbon
  • polysulfide electrocatalysis
  • shuttle effect

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