Lithium-Sulfur Battery Performance Improved Via New Cathode Stabilization Strategy

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An effective new strategy to stabilizing the cathodes in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries was recently developed by researchers at the University of Waterloo in Canada + BASF.

The new strategy allows for significantly improved cycle life performance, improving the number of times that the battery can be charged/discharged without losing significant capacity — which addresses one of the main issues with Li-S batteries, that the cathode degrades rapidly.

The new strategy depends largely on the use of nanosheets of manganese dioxide (MnO2) to stabilize the cathode — the mechanism identified by the researchers applies to graphene oxide and other materials as well though.

Here are some of the technical specifics, as explained in the abstract of the new research paper:

Here we report a strategy to entrap polysulfides in the cathode that relies on a chemical process, whereby a host—​manganese dioxide nanosheets serve as the prototype—reacts with initially formed lithium polysulfides to form surface-bound intermediates. These function as a redox shuttle to catenate and bind ‘higher’ polysulfides, and convert them on reduction to insoluble lithium sulfide via disproportionation. The ​sulfur/​manganese dioxide nanosheet composite with 75 wt% ​sulfur exhibits a reversible capacity of 1,300 mA h g−1 at moderate rates and a fade rate over 2,000 cycles of 0.036%/cycle, among the best reported to date. We furthermore show that this mechanism extends to graphene oxide and suggest it can be employed more widely.

Unlike previous strategies to trap polysulfides by physical barriers or simple surface interactions, this chemistry is quite efficient. The discovery and understanding of a transfer mediator, which binds polysulfides and promotes stable redox activity, addresses one of the important challenges that face this chemistry. Along with future anticipated improvements in electrolytes and the lithium-negative electrode, this brings the Li–S battery a step closer to practical realization.

That realization would of course lower batteries costs pretty significantly — that is, if the technology is embraced by the industry and can see the benefits of economies of scale + if it can be easily mass manufactured.

While the research is promising, until the findings are actually being put into practice commercially (economically) it’s very much an unknown what will come of it. Perhaps nothing.

The researchers are now working to explore other materials options — in particular, determining those best-suited to this process/strategy.

The new findings are detailed in a paper just published in the journal Nature Communications.

Image Credit: University of Waterloo; BASF


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James Ayre

James Ayre's background is predominantly in geopolitics and history, but he has an obsessive interest in pretty much everything. After an early life spent in the Imperial Free City of Dortmund, James followed the river Ruhr to Cofbuokheim, where he attended the University of Astnide. And where he also briefly considered entering the coal mining business. He currently writes for a living, on a broad variety of subjects, ranging from science, to politics, to military history, to renewable energy.

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