Cobalt-Doped Vanadium Nitride Composited Carbon Hollow Spheres for Enhanced Lithium-Sulfur Battery Performance: Overcoming Sulfur Dissolution and Shuttle Effect
Abstract
This study addresses the challenges of sulfur dissolution and shuttle effect in the practical application of lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries by developing cobalt-doped vanadium nitride composited carbon hollow spheres (CoVN/C-HS). The embedding of CoVN nanoparticles within the carbon hollow spheres constructs an efficient charge transport network that significantly reduces electrode interfacial resistance, accelerates charge transfer during charging and discharging, and effectively mitigates polarization, thereby ensuring battery stability under high-rate conditions. Additionally, the strong interaction between CoVN nanoparticles and the carbon hollow sphere matrix enhances the material's adsorptive capacity for polysulfides, effectively suppressing their dissolution and shuttle, which prolongs battery cycle life. Therefore, the prepared CoVN/C-HS material has demonstrated excellent performance in the application of Li-S batteries. At a low current density of 0.05 C, the battery achieved an initial discharge capacity of up to 1475 mAh g-1, fully demonstrating the efficient utilization of sulfur by the material. Remarkably, even after 100 cycles at 0.2 C, the battery retains a capacity of 1067 mAh g-1, showcasing excellent cycle stability. Notably, at a high current density of 2 C, the battery achieves an initial capacity of 918.8 mAh g-1 and maintains 662 mAh g-1 after 400 cycles. This success not only presents a novel approach to optimizing Li-S batteries performance by meticulously tuning material structure and composition to concurrently address sulfur dissolution and shuttle effect but also lays a solid foundation for the large-scale commercialization of this battery type.