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Towards Stable Lithium-Sulfur Batteries with a Low Self-Discharge Rate: Ion Diffusion Modulation and Anode Protection

  • Wen Tao Xu
  • , Hong Jie Peng
  • , Jia Qi Huang
  • , Chen Zi Zhao
  • , Xin Bing Cheng
  • , Qiang Zhang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Tsinghua University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The self-discharge of a lithium-sulfur cell decreases the shelf-life of the battery and is one of the bottlenecks that hinders its practical applications. New insights into both the internal chemical reactions in a lithium-sulfur system and effective routes to retard self-discharge for highly stable batteries are crucial for the design of lithium-sulfur cells. Herein, a lithium-sulfur cell with a carbon nanotube/sulfur cathode and lithium-metal anode in lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide/1,3-dioxolane/dimethyl ether electrolyte was selected as the model system to investigate the self-discharge behavior. Both lithium anode passivation and polysulfide anion diffusion suppression strategies are applied to reduce self-discharge of the lithium-sulfur cell. When the lithium-metal anode is protected by a high density passivation layer induced by LiNO3, a very low shuttle constant of 0.017 h-1 is achieved. The diffusion of the polysulfides is retarded by an ion-selective separator, and the shuttle constants decreased. The cell with LiNO3 additive maintained a discharge capacity of 97% (961 mAhg-1) of the initial capacity after 120 days at open circuit, which was around three times higher than the routine cell (32% of initial capacity, corresponding to 320 mAhg-1). It is expected that lithium-sulfur batteries with ultralow self-discharge rates may be fabricated through a combination of anode passivation and polysulfide shuttle control, as well as optimization of the lithium-sulfur cell configuration.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2892-2901
Number of pages10
JournalChemSusChem
Volume8
Issue number17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • carbon
  • electrochemistry
  • lithium
  • nanotubes
  • sulfur

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