Trapping sulfur in hierarchically porous, hollow indented carbon spheres: A high-performance cathode for lithium-sulfur batteries

Hierarchically porous hollow carbon spheres with an indented void structure have been designed as hosts for high-performance cathode materials for lithium-sulfur batteries. With a diameter of approximately 100 nm and a pore volume of 3.72 cm3 g-1, the hosts can retain sulfur within the porous struct...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhong, Y., Wang, S., Sha, Y., Liu, M., Cai, R., Li, L., Shao, Zongping
Format: Journal Article
Published: R S C Publications 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8958
Description
Summary:Hierarchically porous hollow carbon spheres with an indented void structure have been designed as hosts for high-performance cathode materials for lithium-sulfur batteries. With a diameter of approximately 100 nm and a pore volume of 3.72 cm3 g-1, the hosts can retain sulfur within the porous structures, including the external cone-like cavities, the porous carbon shells, and the inner linings. The exquisite indented structure provides excellent electron and Li-ion pathways while the symmetrically indented voids evenly alleviate the stress induced by the volume change during cycling. The oxygen functional groups further relieve the shuttle effect of polysulfide. A composite electrode with 52% sulfur loading demonstrates a remarkable initial discharge capacity of 1478 mA h g-1 at 1/10C (1C = 1675 mA g-1), corresponding to 88% sulfur utilization. Even when the sulfur/carbon (S/C) ratio of the composite is increased threefold from 1:1 to 3:1 (75% sulfur loading), a very high capacity retention is still maintained, achieving an ultraslow rate of capacity fading, ~0.047% per cycle over 1200 cycles at 1/2C.