Discrete Hollow Carbon Spheres Derived from Pyrolytic Copolymer Microspheres for Li-S Batteries

  • Choi Y
  • Yoon N
  • Kim N
  • et al.
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Abstract

Discrete hollow carbon spheres (HCSs) with a high surface-to-volume ratio and distinct conducting shell have attracted immense attention as electrode materials for batteries and supercapacitors. In this study, we developed a novel and scalable method to synthesize well-defined HCSs. The HCSs were prepared using a pyrolytic soft template of styrene/acrylic acid copolymer microspheres. Sulfur could be effectively confined inside the pores of the uniform-sized HCSs (average diameter = 320 nm, shell thickness = 40-50 nm) to produce a S/HCS-65-IM (S content = 65 wt%) Li-S cathode using a modified sulfur-loading method involving solution impregnation followed by melt-diffusion (IM). S/HCS-65-IM delivered much higher capacity and greater cycling stability over 200 cycles and showed much lower impedance build up than S/HCS-65-PM prepared via the conventional melt-diffusion of a physical mixture of sulfur powder and HCSs. The sulfur utilization of S/HCS-65-IM was further improved by more than 20% by suppressing its lithium-polysulfide shuttle effect using a carbon-coated separator (CCS). The S/HCS-65-IM cathode (with CCS) also exhibited excellent cycling stability (capacity retention of >81% after 200 cycles at 0.5 C) and high rate capability with a reduced interfacial charge transfer resistance, suggesting that S/HCS-65-IM (with CCS) is a promising cathode for Li-S batteries. (c) The Author(s) 2018. Published by ECS. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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APA

Choi, Y., Yoon, N., Kim, N., Oh, C., Park, H., & Lee, J. K. (2019). Discrete Hollow Carbon Spheres Derived from Pyrolytic Copolymer Microspheres for Li-S Batteries. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 166(3), A5099–A5108. https://doi.org/10.1149/2.0151903jes

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