JOURNAL ARTICLE

Sulfur Vapor-Infiltrated 3D Carbon Nanotube Foam for Binder-Free High Areal Capacity Lithium–Sulfur Battery Composite Cathodes

Mengya LiRachel CarterAnna DouglasLandon OakesCary L. Pint

Year: 2017 Journal:   ACS Nano Vol: 11 (5)Pages: 4877-4884   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Here, we demonstrate a strategy to produce high areal loading and areal capacity sulfur cathodes by using vapor-phase infiltration of low-density carbon nanotube (CNT) foams preformed by solution processing and freeze-drying. Vapor-phase capillary infiltration of sulfur into preformed and binder-free low-density CNT foams leads to a mass loading of ∼79 wt % arising from interior filling and coating of CNTs with sulfur while preserving conductive CNT-CNT junctions that sustain electrical accessibility through the thick foam. Sulfur cathodes are then produced by mechanically compressing these foams into dense composites (ρ > 0.2 g/cm3), revealing specific capacity of 1039 mAh/gS at 0.1 C, high sulfur areal loading of 19.1 mg/cm2, and high areal capacity of 19.3 mAh/cm2. This work highlights a technique broadly adaptable to a diverse group of nanostructured building blocks where preformed low-density materials can be vapor infiltrated with sulfur, mechanically compressed, and exhibit simultaneous high areal and gravimetric storage properties. This provides a route for scalable, low-cost, and high-energy density sulfur cathodes based on conventional solid electrode processing routes.

Keywords:
Materials science Carbon nanotube Cathode Sulfur Lithium–sulfur battery Gravimetric analysis Composite material Composite number Nanotube Electrode Chemical engineering Coating Electrolyte Chemistry Organic chemistry Metallurgy

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250
Cited By
19.56
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
59
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1.00
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advancements in Battery Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced battery technologies research
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering

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