Soumyadip
Choudhury
ab,
Marco
Zeiger
ac,
Pau
Massuti-Ballester
ac,
Simon
Fleischmann
c,
Petr
Formanek
b,
Lars
Borchardt
d and
Volker
Presser
*ac
aINM – Leibniz Institute for New Materials, Campus D2 2, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany. E-mail: volker.presser@leibniz-inm.de
bLeibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung Dresden e.V., Hohe Str. 6, 01069 Dresden, Germany
cDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Saarland University, Campus D2 2, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany
dDepartment of Inorganic Chemistry, Technische Universität Dresden, Bergstraße 66, 01062 Dresden, Germany
First published on 3rd January 2017
In this study, we explore carbon onions (diameter below 10 nm), for the first time, as a substrate material for lithium sulfur cathodes. We introduce several scalable synthesis routes to fabricate carbon onion–sulfur hybrids by adopting in situ and melt diffusion strategies with sulfur fractions up to 68 mass%. The conducting skeleton of agglomerated carbon onions proved to be responsible for keeping active sulfur always in close vicinity to the conducting matrix. Therefore, the hybrids are found to be efficient cathodes for Li–S batteries, yielding 97–98% Coulombic efficiency over 150 cycles with a slow fading of the specific capacity (ca. 660 mA h g−1 after 150 cycles) in long term cycle test and rate capability experiments.
Lithium–sulfur (Li–S) systems have emerged in recent years as a promising battery class.6–9 In addition to the high specific capacity, using sulfur as a cathode material has the advantages of high natural abundance, low cost, and high environmental friendliness.7 Although the lithium–sulfur system operates at a relatively low average potential of 2.1 V against Li/Li+, it shows a very high theoretical specific capacity of 1675 mA h g−1 and a high theoretical specific energy of 2600 W h kg−1.5,10 A remaining hindrance to reach the theoretical limit is the low sulfur utilization for Li–S rechargeable systems. Still, Li–S batteries suffer from the isolative behavior of the start (S8) and end product (Li2S), active material loss by dissolution of intermediate species (polysulfides) in the electrolyte, and shuttle mechanisms leading to anode passivation by the deposition of Li2S2 and Li2S.11,12
Several studies have shown different carbons as a conductive substrate for insulating sulfur including a variety of carbons with a high surface area and conductivity. Among others, researchers have investigated multi-walled carbon nanotubes,13–15 mesoporous carbon,16 graphene,14,17 carbide-derived carbon,18 biomass derived carbon,19,20 three-dimensional bicontinuous gyroidal carbon,21,22 carbon from polyacrylonitrile,23 activated carbon fiber cloth,24 and hard25 or soft templated carbons26 as substrates for sulfur in lithium–sulfur batteries.
In this work, we explore carbon onions for lithium sulfur batteries. Carbon onions, also known as onion-like carbon (OLC), consist of several concentrically stacked graphitic carbon spheres.27 A facile and scalable synthesis route for carbon onions is thermal annealing of nanodiamond powder in an inert atmosphere or vacuum.28 During the annealing process at temperatures above 1300 °C, the sp3-hybridized nanodiamond is progressively converted to quasi-spherical sp2-carbon onions.29 The high electrical conductivity of carbon onion aggregates (ca. 4 S cm−1) provides a conductive network for sulfur, while the enhanced surface area (200–600 m2 g−1) and nanoscopic size (5–10 nm),30 hierarchical porous structure, and possibility to create a mechanically robust electrode structure are attractive for creating a large sulfur/electrolyte interface, mitigating polysulfide shuttling. Our work compared different synthesis approaches for obtaining carbon onion/sulfur electrodes, provides structural and chemical characterization, and benchmarks the resulting electrochemical performance.
Fig. 1 Schematic representation of fabrication of OLC-S hybrids following three different approaches. |
For in situ formation of sulfur nanoparticles on the carbon onion surface, 1.55 g of sodium thiosulfate was first dissolved in 40 mL of water. Afterwards, 100 mg of carbon onions was added with subsequent sonication for 30 min under ice-cold water. In the next step, 2.5 mL of 5 M HCl was added dropwise to the system. By this time, sulfur nanoparticles were formed in the mixture. The mixture was left to react for 2 h and was filtered through a 0.2 μm hydrophilic PVDF filter. It was washed with copious amounts of water until pH 7 was achieved. The carbon onion/sulfur mixture was dried at 80 °C under vacuum for 12 h.
For the third OLC-S hybrid, the carbon onions/sulfur nanoparticle mixture was thermally annealed at 155 °C following the same protocol maintained for the first set of samples.
For comparison, electrodes of the same thickness were made with sulfur nanoparticles along with 10 mass% conductive additive (Super C65) and 8 mass% PVDF binder. The slurry was cast onto nickel foil following the same way as done for carbon onion/sulfur hybrids. This electrode is designated as SNP (sulfur nanoparticle) electrode.
Carbon onion/sulfur (OLC-S) hybrids were synthesized using three different approaches, as described in the Experimental section. The overall distribution of sulfur on the carbon onion surface and in the interparticle voids was surveyed with energy filtered transmission electron microscopy (EFTEM). The sulfur signal was confirmed by comparing energy filtered images below (153 eV) and above (200 eV) the sulfur ionization edge (165 eV). As seen from Fig. 2B, the in situ deposition of sulfur on OLC (OLC-S-2) shows the most uniform sulfur distribution, whereas the melt-mixing (OLC-S-1) leads to a larger degree of localized sulfur clustering (Fig. 2A). Further annealing of in situ deposited sulfur on OLC (OLC-S-3) resulted in a low degree of sulfur clustering. Carbon onions act as nucleating surfaces for sulfur nanoparticle deposition, whereas the melt diffusion strategy results in non-uniform spreading of molten sulfur in a random manner. However, the in situ sulfur nanoparticle deposition on carbon onion surfaces followed by thermal annealing leads to a low extent of sulfur clustering compared to the mechanical melt mixing pathway, as evident from the carbon–sulfur colored overlay images (Fig. 2C).
Fig. 2 (A–C) Energy filtered transmission electron micrographs of carbon onion/sulfur hybrid materials, their corresponding elemental maps, and the overlay of carbon and sulfur elemental mappings. |
The nitrogen gas sorption measurement of carbon onions shows a surface area of 425 m2 g−1 (BET) and 402 m2 g−1 (DFT) with a pore volume of 1.21 cm3 g−1. The pore size distribution pattern can be differentiated into three regimes: pores related to particles in direct contact (for pores <1 nm), particles separated by spacer particles (at 1 nm pore size and in the mesopore range), and pores between particle agglomerates (Fig. 3A). These spaces among the particle interstices were utilized to embed insulating sulfur to attain a high degree of intimate contact with the carbon onion surfaces. Additionally, the pore hierarchy also plays a crucial role in functioning of lithium–sulfur batteries by accommodating a large quantity of sulfur mass as well as electrolyte wetting together with lowering the tendency of polysulfide migration out of the cathode to the bulk electrolyte.15,35–39
Thermogravimetric analysis of pristine carbon onions undergoes a very little mass loss of ca. 1% up to 500 °C. This mass loss is attributed to the decomposition of functional groups on the surface of carbon onions. The thermogravimetric measurements of OLC-S hybrids demonstrate one step mass loss at around 300 °C for all samples with a mass loss of 68% OLC-S-1 and 65% for OLC-S-2 and OLC-S-3 (Fig. 3B). The respective mass loss corresponds to the sulfur content from CHNS elemental analysis (Table 1). The absence of any other step in the thermogram indicates that sulfur is only coated onto the carbon onions and does not penetrate the inside of the particles, irrespective of the deposition process. For contrast, hierarchical porous carbons exhibit more than one step of mass loss during thermogravimetry.40,41 It is reported in the literature that the sulfur confined in micropores requires a higher thermal energy and is released at much higher temperature than the sulfur present outside the micropores.40,41
Sample | Sulfur (mass%) | |
---|---|---|
TGA | CHNS | |
OLC-S-1 | 68 | 68 ± 1 |
OLC-S-2 | 65 | 62 ± 5 |
OLC-S-3 | 65 | 64 ± 1 |
The structure of carbon onions was not changed by the synthesis procedures as indicated by Raman spectroscopy (Fig. 3C, Table 2, and Fig. S2, ESI†) and XRD (Fig. 3D). Independent of the treatment, carbon onions are characterized by their typical Raman spectrum with the carbon D-mode at 1338 cm−1, the G-mode at 1577 cm−1, and a distinct second order spectrum (Fig. S2, ESI†). The G-mode, representative for sp2-hybridized carbon, is measured at 1577 cm−1, indicating nanocrystalline and partially amorphous carbon. Amorphous carbon is mostly located between the particles (Fig. S1B, ESI†), leading to partially connected particles and a strong degree of agglomeration. Carbon onions present a rather high degree of ordering as demonstrated by the sharp G-mode (FWHM of 44 cm−1) and the distinct second order peaks at 2675 cm−1. By virtue of the instability under laser irradiation, we did not detect any sulfur when using a laser wavelength of 532 nm. To avoid such degradation, we conducted also experiments at 633 nm excitation wavelength (Fig. 3C). Commercial sulfur and sulfur derived from sodium thiosulfate were also characterized by Raman spectroscopy. Sulfur shows three distinct peaks at 156, 219, and 473 cm−1, which are related to the vibrations of the S–S bonds.14,19,42 When measuring the OLC-S hybrids by Raman spectroscopy, OLC-S-2 and OLC-S-3 showed very weak sulfur signals, whereas OLC-S-1 demonstrated very clearly all three characteristic sulfur peaks. This indicates the presence of non-uniform distributions of sulfur onto the carbon onion surfaces whereas the two other hybrids claim to have nearly homogeneous coverage of sulfur on OLC. As a result, the Raman signals from carbon predominate over sulfur signals although all three hybrids contain ca. 65 mass% of sulfur (relative to the carbon mass).
Sample | Position D-band (cm−1) | Position G-band (cm−1) | FWHM D-band (cm−1) | FWHM G-band (cm−1) | I D/IG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
OLC | 1338 | 1580 | 57 | 44 | 1.43 |
OLC-S-1 | 1339 | 1579 | 67 | 48 | 1.79 |
OLC-S-2 | 1339 | 1577 | 62 | 46 | 1.70 |
OLC-S-3 | 1338 | 1576 | 62 | 48 | 1.69 |
The incompletely crystalline structure of carbon onions was further assessed by XRD (Fig. 3D). The broadening of the (002) graphitic carbon peak at ∼26° 2θ is a consequence of the nanoscopic carbon particle size of 5–7 nm. In all three OLC-S hybrids, all crystalline peaks of sulfur are detected in alignment with PDF 78-1889. This confirms the growth of crystalline sulfur domains on the carbon onion substrates and ensures the allocation of sulfur in interparticle voids. When carbon with a large inner porosity is used as the host for sulfur, molten sulfur or nanoparticle precursor solutions tend to infiltrate into the pores driven by capillary forces.16,24 In such a case, the imbibed sulfur in the pores does not display the well-resolved crystalline peaks.16,24 In the OLC-S hybrids, sulfur remains at the exterior surfaces of OLC particles. For this reason, no significant differences were visible in the XRD pattern of three different hybrid types.
The usefulness of the carbon onions as a host for embedding sulfur was further tested by sheet resistance measurements of the 80–100 μm (dry) thick electrodes coated on polyimide foil (Table 3). Using a four-point-probe, the measured electrical conductivity of all samples showed little difference, with values around 0.2 S cm−1.
Sample | Conductivity (S cm−1) |
---|---|
OLC-S-1 electrode | 19.8 × 10−2 |
OLC-S-2 electrode | 23.3 × 10−2 |
OLC-S-3 electrode | 20.8 × 10−2 |
Electrochemical characterization including cyclic voltammetry (three-electrode setup) and galvanostatic charge–discharge measurements (two-electrode setup) was performed by using the OLC-S composite electrode as the working electrode (cathode) and lithium as the counter electrode (anode) and reference electrode. The cyclic voltammograms show the characteristic shape of sulfur oxidation and reduction (Fig. 4A, C and E). During discharge, the characteristic two reduction peaks at around 2.4 V and 2.0 V vs. Li appear (Fig. 4A, C and E). These peaks correspond to the ring opening reduction of sulfur to Li2Sn (n > 4) and the subsequent reduction of higher order polysulfides to short chain polysulfide species, respectively.43 The anodic sweep shows a characteristic single peak at around 2.4 V vs. Li. The relatively narrow peaks for OLC-S-2 and stable peak positions for oxidation and reduction indicate good reaction kinetics for reduction and oxidation reactions in the first cycle and run in a comparable range for all cycles. The two other hybrids OLC-S-1 and OLC-S-3 have much broader oxidation and reduction peaks which are indicative of relatively slow and inferior reaction kinetics compared to OLC-S-2. Such broadening of redox peaks arises from uneven distribution of sulfur in the OLC matrix. Thus, the reaction steps are overlapping and yield broader redox peaks, which indicate poor performances such as low energy efficiency and slow kinetics. The poorer performance can be related to larger amounts of inactive sulfur insufficiently connected to the conductive carbon onion substrate. In the case of OLC-S-3, due to the thermal treatment after nanoparticle formation, the molten sulfur moves to some extent from the surface and reorganizes as larger sulfur particles, which are not ideally covering the carbon onion surfaces anymore. Those agglomerated parts remain electrochemically inactive, thus demonstrating poorer performance compared to OLC-S-2.
The reversible galvanostatic charge–discharge tests of the OLC-S hybrids were carried out in 2032 coin cells at 0.1C discharge rate (167 mA g−1) and 0.2C charging rate (334 mA g−1). The plateaus in the voltage profiles (Fig. 4B, D and F) match the peak voltages of the cyclic voltammograms for reduction and oxidation (Fig. 4A, C and E). We identify two plateaus in the discharge process, as summarized by Ji et al. (ref. 16):
• The first one contributes a minor part to the overall capacity from 2.4 V to ca. 2.1 V vs. Li. This plateau corresponds to the ring opening conversion of elemental sulfur (S8) to Li polysulfide anions (Li2Sx; where x is typically 4–5).6,7,11 The kinetics of this step are fast.
• The second plateau appears at around 2.1 V vs. Li due to the conversion reaction of higher order polysulfides to Li2S2 and then to Li2S. This reaction occurs at a much slower rate and contributes to the large fraction of the overall capacity.
The similarity of voltage profiles at different cycles is indicative of slower capacity fading with prolonged cycling. Additionally, the voltage plateaus of all samples that appear at the same potential during discharge and charge reflect the mitigation of active mass loss per charging–discharging cycles.
The corresponding specific capacities for charging and discharging are represented normalized to the sulfur mass (Fig. 5A). The specific capacities of all hybrids present values of 900–1200 mA h gsulfur−1 in the initial cycles (up to 5 cycles). After 10 charge–discharge cycles, OLC-S-2 and OLC-S-3 hybrids showed only a slow capacity fading per cycles. The capacity stabilized at 800 mA h gsulfur−1 and 600 mA h gsulfur−1 up to 150 charging–discharging cycles for OLC-S-2 and OLC-S-3 hybrids, respectively. Cathodes containing carbon onions/sulfur hybrids, where the melt diffusion route was followed, demonstrated severe capacity fading within 50 cycles and remained with only 400 mA h gsulfur−1 at the end of 150 cycles of charge–discharge. The electrode prepared from sulfur nanoparticles (SNPs) with 10 mass% conductive additive showed a low specific capacity in the initial cycles. After 20 cycles, the specific capacity was stabilized at 200 mA h gsulfur−1 for the following 150 cycles. The relatively low specific capacity values are because of an insufficient amount of conducting carbon with a high surface area around the sulfur nanoparticles. Additionally, a comparison of specific capacities from the literature with different types of carbon substrates can be found in Table 4.
Carbon for cathode | Surface area (m2 g−1) | Sulfur loading (mg cm−2) | Separator | Electrolyte | Specific capacity (mA h gsulfur−1) | Potential window | C-Rate | Ref. | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cycle 5 | Cycle 50 | Cycle 100 | ||||||||
This work | ca. 400 | 2–3 | Polyolefin separators | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL + 0.25 M LiNO3 | ca. 950 (OLC-2) | ca. 730 (OLC-2) | ca. 670 (OLC-2) | 1.8–2.6 V | 0.1C (discharge), 0.2C (charge) | — |
Acetylene black | ca. 65 | 1.5 | Polypropylene separator | 1 M LiPF6 PC/EC/DEC 1:4:5 (v/v) | ca. 600 | ca. 500 | — | 1.8–2.8 V | 0.02C | 45 |
Ketjen black | ca. 800 | 0.81 | Unknown | 0.5 M LiSO3CF3 in 8:2 (v/v) DME/DOL + imidazolium salts | ca. 770 | ca. 700 | ca. 600 | 1.8–2.8 V | 0.5C | 46 |
Multi-walled carbon nanotube | ca. 107 | Unknown | Celgard | 0.5 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL + 0.5 M LiNO3 | ca. 1100 | ca. 1000 | ca. 950 | 1.7–2.7 V | 0.18C | 35 |
Vertically aligned CNTs | — | Unknown | Celgard and glass fiber mat | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL + 0.25 M LiNO3 | ca. 850 | ca. 750 (cycle 40) | — | 1–3 V | 0.08C | 47 |
Small CNTs confined inside a large CNT | ca. 150 | 1.36 | Unknown | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL | ca. 1250 | ca. 1100 | ca. 1000 | 1.5–3 V | 0.1C | 43 |
Carbon aerogel | ca. 1395 | Unknown | Polypropylene separator | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL + 0.1 M LiNO3 | ca. 790 | ca. 650 | ca. 600 | 1.8–2.8 V | 0.1C | 40 |
Ordered mesoporous carbon | 2445 | 0.45 | Not mentioned | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL | ca. 1000 | ca. 900 | ca. 800 | 1.5–3 V | 1C | 48 |
Ordered mesoporous carbon (KOH activated) | ca. 1566 | 0.25 | Celgard | 1 M LiTFSI in 55:40 (v/v) DME/DOL | ca. 500 (51.5% S) | ca. 300 | — | 1–3.6 V | 1.5C | 37 |
Sulphur–TiO2 yolk–shell | — | 0.4–0.6 | Unknown | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL + 0.14 M LiNO3 | ca. 1000 | ca. 800 | ca. 900 | 1.7–2.6 V | 0.5C | 49 |
Hydrothermal carbon from monosaccharides | ca. 300 | Unknown | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL | ca. 780 | ca. 580 | — | 1.5–3.2 V | 1C | 50 | |
Reduced graphene oxide | — | Unknown | Celgard | LiTFSI in PYR14TFSI/PEGDME (1:1 w/w) | ca. 900 | ca. 900 | — | 1–3 V | 0.02C (3 cycles) then 0.1C for 47 cycles | 51 |
Graphene-enveloped sulfur | — | Unknown | Unknown | 1 M LiTFSI in TEGDME | ca. 690 | ca. 520 | — | 1.5–3 V | 0.2C | 17 |
Nafion coated sandwich type graphene sheets | ca. 578 | Unknown | Celgard | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL | ca. 950 | ca. 800 | — | 1–3 V | 0.1C | 52 |
Activated carbon fiber cloth | 2000 | 6.5 | Celgard | 0.35 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL + 0.29 M LiNO3 | ca. 1000 | ca. 950 | — | 1.7–2.5 V | 0.09C | 24 |
Inverse opal carbon | ca. 1300 | 2–3 | Polyolefin separator | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL + 0.25 M LiNO3 | ca. 1650 | ca. 400 | — | 1.5–2.8 V | 0.1C | 26 |
3D gyroidal carbon | ca. 900 | 2–3 | Polyolefin separator | 1 M LiTFSI in 1:1 (v/v) DME/DOL | ca. 650 | ca. 600 | ca. 520 | 1.5–2.8 V | 0.1C (discharge), 0.2C (charge) | 21 |
3D gyroidal carbon (activated) | ca. 2000 | 0.8 | Celgard | 1 M LiTFSI in TEGDME + 0.15 M LiNO3 | ca. 1100 | ca. 1000 | ca. 830 | 1.5–2.8 V | 0.1C | 22 |
The capacity loss in the initial cycles can be attributed to the irreversible diffusion of polysulfides possibly from the dissociative sulfur on the surface of OLC particles. This irreversible reaction leads to slightly lower Coulombic efficiency close to 97–99% in reversible (Fig. 5B) or irreversible mode (Fig. 5C). For comparison, the SNP electrodes demonstrated a Coulombic efficiency below 95% after 30 cycles and after 100 cycles, the Coulombic efficiency dropped below 90%. This behavior can be explained by a lack of structural integrity and loss of electrical connectivity between the additive and sulfur nanoparticles. The relatively high specific capacity in the beginning and the slow capacity fading of OLC-S hybrids can be attributed to the benefits of the enhanced surface area of carbon onions and the accessible interparticle space. The interconnecting feature of carbon onion agglomerates provides a high electrical conductivity and is beneficial to ensure accessibility of the active material by the electrolyte and the Li+ ions with prolonged cycling.
The rate capability tests of the carbon onion–sulfur hybrids were carried out in 2032 coin cells at multiple C-rates (Fig. 5C). The respective charge and discharge protocol is explained in the experimental part. After 20 cycles at a low rate (0.2C charge and 0.1C discharge) and 30 cycles at a high rate (up to 2C charge and 1C discharge) the specific capacity was recovered close to the level of the initial 20th cycles after multiple irreversible charging–discharging fluctuations. From the irreversible capacity retention ability, it can be concluded that the carbon onion–sulfur composite nanostructures were not ruptured and the sulfur distribution was restored even after such stringent charging–discharging conditions.
Finally, we investigated the long-term cycle performance of the OLC-S hybrids at very high C-rates, for instance, 2C (equivalent to 3350 mA g−1 with respect to sulfur) for charging and 1C (equivalent to 1675 mA g−1 with respect to sulfur) for discharging (Fig. 6). Among all three OLC-S hybrids, the onion-like carbon hybrid fabricated by the in situ routine followed by thermal annealing demonstrated an initial specific discharge capacity of 800 mA h g−1. After 25 cycles, the battery showed a very high stability over 500 cycles with a slow rate of capacity fading (Fig. 6). For the latter, we measured a remaining capacity of 400 mA h g−1 after 500 cycles. The other in situ hybrid (i.e., without annealing) followed a similar trend, yielding 300 mA h g−1 after 500 cycles. The OLC-S hybrid fabricated via the melt diffusion strategy had been showing poorest performances amongst all three hybrids due to random distribution of sulfur in the hybrid. The better performance of the OLC-S-3 at higher rates relative to other hybrids was also observed in rate capability experiments (Fig. 5C). The slower capacity fading at such high specific currents is mainly ascribed to the excellent electrical conductivity of the OLC-S hybrids, which are capable of satisfying the requirement for such fast discharge and charge during repetitive cycling.41,43 We attribute the better performance at higher charge/discharge rates of OLC-S-3 to the much more integrated hybrid nanostructure by melting of the in situ deposited sulfur on the surface of OLC. Our findings are also in good agreement with the published reports by Nazar et al. performed at high C rates (cut-off voltage limit 1.5–3 V vs. Li/Li+) exploiting bimodal porous carbon possessing over 2000 m2 g−1 surface area.44
Fig. 6 Long term cycle stability at high C-rates (charging at 2C/discharging at 1C) study of the carbon onion/sulfur hybrids. |
The electrochemical performance of these hybrid materials has been tested by electrochemical characterization. Carbon onion–sulfur hybrids prepared via the in situ approach (OLC-S-2 and OLC-S-3) had an optimum interaction between the hybrid components exhibiting a specific capacity of ca. 700 mA h g−1 even after 150 charge–discharge cycles at 167 mA g−1 specific current (corresponds to 0.1C discharge rate). In addition, the capacity restoration ability of OLC-S in situ hybrids right after running with a high current density of 1675 mA g−1 (corresponds to 1C discharge rate) demonstrated a specific capacity of 740 mA h g−1 close to its earlier capacity at 0.1C rate (800 mA h g−1) when the current density was reduced to 167 mA g−1 (corresponds to 0.1C discharge rate). This hybrid material showed enhanced performance compared to the other OLC-S hybrids studied at slow discharge rates. In addition, these hybrids demonstrate good cycle performances operated with very high C-rates (1C for discharge and 2C for charge). Amongst them, the hybrid fabricated via in situ generation of sulfur nanoparticles on the surface of onion-like carbon followed by thermal annealing (OLC-S-3) has been found to be superior (800 mA h g−1 at cycle 1, 600 mA h g−1 at cycle 20, and 400 mA h g−1 at cycle 500).
The high electrochemical stability and attractive rate handling can be attributed to carbon onion aggregates which contribute a high electronic conductivity and provide an exclusively outer surface, which enables the synergy of high sulfur mass loading and high percentage of electrochemically active sulfur.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6se00034g |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |