Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry and Bar‐Ilan Institute of Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials Bar‐Ilan University Ramat Gan 529002 Israel
Abstract
The performance of lithium–sulfur (Li–S) rechargeable batteries is strongly dependent on the entrapment of the higher‐order intermediate polysulfides at the sulfur cathode. An attracting way of preventing the polysulfide shuttle is by introducing a polar host which can form a Lewis acid–base complex with polysulfides. Herein, the Li–S battery by incorporating iron sulfides (FeS2) as a polar Lewis acid to entrap higher‐order polysulfides at the cathode center is investigated. FeS2/S cathode demonstrates largely improved retention of capacity compared to C/S cathode (capacity fading per cycle of 0.12% and 0.80% for FeS2/S and C/S respectively) and good rate performance in Li–S batteries compared to conventional carbon–sulfur (C/S) cathode. This is attributed to the decrease in polysulfide dissolution and better retention of active sulfur in the cathode during battery cycling which is due to the polar FeS2 additive that well anchors polysulfides. The effect of FeS2 in preventing the shuttle mechanism is demonstrated by ex situ UV–vis spectroscopy and ex situ Raman spectroscopy studies.
Funder
BIRD Foundation
Ministry of Aliyah and Immigrant Absorption