Login / Signup

Octopus-Inspired Design of Apical NiS2 Nanoparticles Supported on Hierarchical Carbon Composites as an Efficient Host for Lithium Sulfur Batteries with High Sulfur Loading.

Ning WangBiao ChenKaiqiang QinRui ZhangYu TangEnzuo LiuChunsheng ShiChunnian HeNaiqin Zhao
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
Developing high-performance Li-S batteries with high sulfur loading is highly desirable for practical application and remains a major challenge. To achieve this goal, the following requirements for designing carbon/metal compound composites need to be met: (i) the carbon materials need to exhibit suitable specific surface area, void structure, and electrical conductivity; (ii) the weight content of the metal compounds should be low; and (iii) the metal compounds need to show a strong adsorption and efficient electrocatalytic function for LiPSs. In this study, inspired by the body structure of an octopus, a new carbon/NiS2 hierarchical composite is reported, in which the apical NiS2 nanoparticles (0D) on a 1D carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are supported on a three-dimensional carbon (3DC) framework (3DC-CNTs-NiS2). The 3DC-CNTs-NiS2 composite has a high specific surface area (271 m2 g-1), good electrical conductivity, and low NiS2 content (9.2 wt %), and the apical NiS2 nanoparticles are capable of adsorption and electrocatalysis toward LiPSs, demonstrated by both electrochemical characterization and theoretical calculation. When used as a cathode host of the Li-S battery, it exhibits an ultra-stable cycling performance with a fade rate of 0.043% per cycle over 1000 cycles; even with a high S loading (6.5 mg cm-2 with 90 wt % of S), the soft package battery delivers a high area capacity of 5.0 mAh cm-2 under the E/S ratio of 5 μLE mg-1s. This work provides a new approach to design and fabricate multi-functional S hosts with high S loading.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • dendritic cells
  • carbon nanotubes
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • mass spectrometry
  • ion batteries
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • label free