University of Wollongong
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Developing high-power Li||S batteries via transition metal/carbon nanocomposite electrocatalyst engineering

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 13:52 authored by Huan Li, Rongwei Meng, Chao Ye, Anton Tadich, Wuxing Hua, Qinfen Gu, Bernt Johannessen, Xiao Chen, Kenneth Davey, Shi Zhang Qiao
The activity of electrocatalysts for the sulfur reduction reaction (SRR) can be represented using volcano plots, which describe specific thermodynamic trends. However, a kinetic trend that describes the SRR at high current rates is not yet available, limiting our understanding of kinetics variations and hindering the development of high-power Li||S batteries. Here, using Le Chatelier’s principle as a guideline, we establish an SRR kinetic trend that correlates polysulfide concentrations with kinetic currents. Synchrotron X-ray adsorption spectroscopy measurements and molecular orbital computations reveal the role of orbital occupancy in transition metal-based catalysts in determining polysulfide concentrations and thus SRR kinetic predictions. Using the kinetic trend, we design a nanocomposite electrocatalyst that comprises a carbon material and CoZn clusters. When the electrocatalyst is used in a sulfur-based positive electrode (5 mg cm−2 of S loading), the corresponding Li||S coin cell (with an electrolyte:S mass ratio of 4.8) can be cycled for 1,000 cycles at 8 C (that is, 13.4 A gS−1, based on the mass of sulfur) and 25 °C. This cell demonstrates a discharge capacity retention of about 75% (final discharge capacity of 500 mAh gS−1) corresponding to an initial specific power of 26,120 W kgS−1 and specific energy of 1,306 Wh kgS−1.

Funding

National Computational Infrastructure (DP220102596)

History

Journal title

Nature Nanotechnology

Language

English

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