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Achieving High‐Performance Lithium–Sulfur Batteries by Modulating Li<sup>+</sup> Desolvation Barrier with Liquid Crystal Polymers

Xiang Miao, Chenxi Song, Weisheng Hu, Yaoyu Ren, Yang Shen, Ce‐Wen Nan

2024Advanced Materials59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Lithium–sulfur (Li–S) batteries offer high theoretical capacity but are hindered by poor rate capability and cycling stability due to sluggish Li 2 S precipitation kinetics. Here a sulfonate‐group‐rich liquid crystal polymer (poly‐2,2′‐disulfonyl‐4,4′‐benzidine terephthalamide, PBDT) is designed and fabricated to accelerate Li 2 S precipitation by promoting the desolvation of Li + from electrolyte. PBDT‐modified separators are employed to assemble Li–S batteries, which deliver a remarkable rate capacity (761 mAh g −1 at 4 C) and cycling stability (500 cycles with an average decay rate of 0.088% per cycle at 0.5 C). A PBDT‐based pouch cell even delivers an exceptional capacity of ≈1400 mAh g −1 and an areal capacity of ≈11 mAh cm −2 under lean‐electrolyte and high‐sulfur‐loading condition, demonstrating promise for practical applications. Results of Raman spectra, molecular dynamic (MD) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal that the abundant anionic sulfonate groups of PBDT aid in Li + desolvation by attenuating Li + ‐solvent interactions and lowering the desolvation energy barrier. Plus, the polysulfide adsorption/catalysis is also excluded via electrostatic repulsion. This work elucidates the critical impact of Li + desolvation on Li–S batteries and provides a new design direction for advanced Li–S batteries.

Topics & Concepts

Materials sciencePolymerLithium (medication)SulfurCrystal (programming language)Chemical engineeringNanotechnologyInorganic chemistryComposite materialMetallurgyComputer scienceEndocrinologyProgramming languageChemistryEngineeringMedicineAdvanced Battery Materials and TechnologiesAdvancements in Battery MaterialsAdvanced battery technologies research