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Reaction heterogeneity in practical high-energy lithium–sulfur pouch cells

Authors :
Jian Qin
Xiaodi Ren
Xiao-Qing Yang
Dongping Lu
Seong-Min Bak
Dianying Liu
Chaojiang Niu
Arthur Y. Baranovskiy
Jie Xiao
Shuo Feng
Lili Shi
Paul Northrup
Hongkyung Lee
Chengqi Wang
Zulipiya Shadike
Jun Liu
Cassidy S. Anderson
Fei Gao
Source :
Energy & Environmental Science. 13:3620-3632
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2020.

Abstract

The lithium–sulfur (Li–S) battery is a promising next-generation energy storage technology because of its high theoretical energy and low cost. Extensive research efforts have been made on new materials and advanced characterization techniques for mechanistic studies. However, it is uncertain how discoveries made on the material level apply to realistic batteries due to limited analysis and characterization of real high-energy cells, such as pouch cells. Evaluation of pouch cells (>1 A h) (instead of coin cells) that are scalable to practical cells provides a critical understanding of current limitations which enables the proposal of strategies and solutions for further performance improvement. Herein, we design and fabricate pouch cells over 300 W h kg−1, compare the cell parameters required for high-energy pouch cells, and investigate the reaction processes and their correlation to cell cycling behavior and failure mechanisms. Spatially resolved characterization techniques and fluid-flow simulation reveal the impacts of the liquid electrolyte diffusion within the pouch cells. We found that catastrophic failure of high-energy Li–S pouch cells results from uneven sulfur/polysulfide reactions and electrolyte depletion for the first tens of cycles, rather than sulfur dissolution as commonly reported in the literature. The uneven reaction stems from limited electrolyte diffusion through the porous channels into the central part of thick cathodes during cycling, which is amplified both across the sulfur electrodes and within the same electrode plane. A combination of strategies is suggested to increase sulfur utilization, improve nanoarchitectures for electrolyte diffusion and reduce consumption of the electrolytes and additives.

Details

ISSN :
17545706 and 17545692
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Energy & Environmental Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5893b25705412ade3807e3d4c1bc1953
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d0ee02088e