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A Sugar-Derived Room-Temperature Sodium Sulfur Battery with Long Term Cycling Stability.

Rachel CarterLandon OakesAnna DouglasNitin MuralidharanAdam P CohnCary L Pint
Published in: Nano letters (2017)
We demonstrate a room-temperature sodium sulfur battery based on a confining microporous carbon template derived from sucrose that delivers a reversible capacity over 700 mAh/gS at 0.1C rates, maintaining 370 mAh/gS at 10 times higher rates of 1C. Cycling at 1C rates reveals retention of over 300 mAh/gS capacity across 1500 cycles with Coulombic efficiency >98% due to microporous sulfur confinement and stability of the sodium metal anode in a glyme-based electrolyte. We show sucrose to be an ideal platform to develop microporous carbon capable of mitigating electrode-electrolyte reactivity and loss of soluble intermediate discharge products. In a manner parallel to the low-cost materials of the traditional sodium beta battery, our work demonstrates the combination of table sugar, sulfur, and sodium, all of which are cheap and earth abundant, for a high-performance stable room-temperature sodium sulfur battery.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid
  • low cost
  • solid state
  • high intensity
  • ion batteries
  • high throughput
  • gold nanoparticles
  • carbon nanotubes