Lin MaHoulong ZhuangYingying LüSurya S. MogantyRichard G. HennigLynden A. Archer
A rechargeable battery that uses sulfur at the cathode and a metal (e.g., Li, Na, Mg, or Al) at the anode provides perhaps the most promising path to a solid‐state, rechargeable electrochemical storage device capable of high charge storage capacity. It is understood that solubilization in the electrolyte and loss of sulfur in the form of long‐chain lithium polysulfides (Li 2 S x , 2 < x < 8) has hindered development of the most studied of these devices, the rechargeable Li‐S battery. Beginning with density‐functional calculations of the structure and interactions of a generic lithium polysulfide species with nitrile containing molecules, it is shown that it is possible to design nitrile‐rich molecular sorbents that anchor to other components in a sulfur cathode and which exert high‐enough binding affinity to Li 2 S x to limit its loss to the electrolyte. It is found that sorbents based on amines and imidazolium chloride present barriers to dissolution of long‐chain Li 2 S x and that introduction of as little as 2 wt% of these molecules to a physical sulfur‐carbon blend leads to Li‐S battery cathodes that exhibit stable long‐term cycling behaviors at high and low charge/discharge rates.
Lin MaHoulong ZhuangYingying LüSurya S. MogantyRichard G. HennigLynden A. Archer
Shuya WeiLin MaKenville E. HendricksonZhengyuan TuLynden A. Archer