Sustainable Sulfur-Carbon Hybrids for Efficient Sulfur Redox Conversions in Nanoconfined Spaces

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

Evgeny Senokos (Max-Planck-Inst. F. Kolloid-und G.)

Heather Au (Imperial College London)

Enis Oğuzhan Eren (Max-Planck-Inst. F. Kolloid-und G.)

Tim Horner (Max-Planck-Inst. F. Kolloid-und G.)

Zihan Song (Max-Planck-Inst. F. Kolloid-und G.)

Nadezda V. Tarakina (Max-Planck-Inst. F. Kolloid-und G.)

Elif Begüm Yılmaz (Max-Planck-Inst. F. Kolloid-und G.)

Alexandros Vasileiadis (TU Delft - RST/Storage of Electrochemical Energy)

Paolo Giusto (Max-Planck-Inst. F. Kolloid-und G.)

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Research Group
RST/Storage of Electrochemical Energy
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202407300
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
RST/Storage of Electrochemical Energy
Issue number
51
Volume number
20
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Abstract

Nanoconfinement is a promising strategy in chemistry enabling increased reaction rates, enhanced selectivity, and stabilized reactive species. Sulfur's abundance and highly reversible two-electron transfer mechanism have fueled research on sulfur-based electrochemical energy storage. However, the formation of soluble polysulfides, poor reaction kinetics, and low sulfur utilization are current bottlenecks for broader practical application. Herein, a novel strategy is proposed to confine sulfur species in a nanostructured hybrid sulfur-carbon material. A microporous sulfur-rich carbon is produced from sustainable natural precursors via inverse vulcanization and condensation. The material exhibits a unique structure with sulfur anchored to the conductive carbon matrix and physically confined in ultra-micropores. The structure promotes Na+ ion transport through micropores and electron transport through the carbon matrix, while effectively immobilizing sulfur species in the nanoconfined environment, fostering a quasi-solid-state redox reaction with sodium. This translates to ≈99% utilization of the 2e− reduction of sulfur and the highest reported capacity for a room temperature Na−S electrochemical system, with high rate capability, coulombic efficiency, and long-term stability. This study offers an innovative approach toward understanding the key physicochemical properties of sulfurcarbon nanohybrid materials, enabling the development of high-performance cathode materials for room-temperature Na-S batteries with efficient sulfur utilization.