Sulfur infiltration and allotrope formation in porous cathode hosts for lithium-sulfur batteries

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Abstract

We investigate sulfur infiltration and formation of lower order allotropes in heated porous hosts during fabrication of lithium-sulfur (Li-S) battery cathodes. Sulfur existence in cathode ultramicropores has been an important question for Li-S batteries, as ultramicropores reduce the polysulfides “shuttle effect” but also delay sulfur dissolution and Li+ ion diffusion in the trapped solid sulfur. A novel continuum-level model is presented including heat transfer and sulfur infiltration, either from the top of a porous host or from the porous host particle surface, and taking into account the pore size distribution. A novel decay factor in modeling sulfur infiltration incorporates the pore wall repulsion energy and allotrope formation energy (predicted by density functional theory [DFT] simulations). Simulations are performed for a microporous carbon fabric host and an activated carbon powder host with bimodal micropore and macropore size distribution, with Raman and X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) spectroscopy confirming the predicted existence of linear S6 and S4 in ultramicropores.

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Grabe, S., Baboo, J. P., Tennison, S., Zhang, T., Lekakou, C., Andritsos, E. I., … Watts, J. F. (2022). Sulfur infiltration and allotrope formation in porous cathode hosts for lithium-sulfur batteries. AIChE Journal, 68(7). https://doi.org/10.1002/aic.17638

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