The in situ electrolyte reduction induced construction of LiF-rich cathode electrolyte interphase synergizing with high sulfur loading cathode design for high cycle-stable lithium-sulfur batteries

  • Chang Sun
  • , Yingshuai Wang
  • , Qingbo Zhou
  • , Yuhang Xin
  • , Hongcai Gao*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Attaining both high energy density and prolonged cycle stability in lithium‑sulfur (Li[sbnd]S) batteries remains a persistent challenge, particularly for sulfurized polyacrylonitrile (SPAN) cathodes, owing to interfacial instability and restricted sulfur incorporation. Furthermore, elevated sulfur content in the electrode exacerbates capacity degradation in Li-SPAN cells. Herein, we report a pre-potentiostatic strategy to induce in situ reductive decomposition of LiPF6 based carbonate electrolytes, with the formation of a compact and LiF-rich cathode electrolyte interphase (CEI) on a S8@S7Se/PAN composite cathode with a high sulfur loading content. The robust LiF-rich CEI effectively suppresses polysulfide dissolution, mitigates parasitic side reactions, and facilitates solid-phase sulfur redox reactions by providing a mechanically stable and ionically conductive interface. Unlike conventional organic-rich transient CEIs, the LiF-rich CEIs exhibit superior uniformity and long-term stability under lean electrolyte (E/S ≤ 4.5 μL mg−1) and high mass loading (>4 mg cm−2) conditions. Electrochemical tests demonstrate a high initial capacity of 1622.68 mAh g−1 at a current density of 0.2C and stable cycling performance with a reversible capacity of 714.7 mAh g−1 over 5000 cycles under the lean electrolyte conditions (E/S = 3.5 μL mg−1) in Li(~ 45 μm)||S8@S7Se/PAN(5.51 mg cm−2) cells. This study presents a universal and scalable CEI engineering strategy that effectively resolves the conventional trade-off between energy density and cycling stability in Li-SPAN systems. The progressive degradation of the CEI is a critical determinant of electrode performance decay at high active material loading, thereby providing a viable pathway toward the practical implementation of high-performance Li[sbnd]S batteries.

Original languageEnglish
Article number169050
JournalChemical Engineering Journal
Volume525
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • High sulfur content
  • LiF-rich cathode-electrolyte interphase
  • Li‑sulfur batteries
  • Potentiostatic Reduction
  • Solid-phase redox

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