Tunable Nitrogen-Doping of Sulfur Host Nanostructures for Stable and Shuttle-Free Room-Temperature Sodium–Sulfur Batteries

Room-temperature sodium–sulfur batteries have potential in stationary applications, but challenges such as loss of active sulfur and low electrical conductivity must be solved. Nitrogen-doped nanocarbon host cathodes have been employed in metal–sulfur batteries: polar interactions mitigate the loss...

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Published inNano letters Vol. 21; no. 12; pp. 5401 - 5408
Main Authors Eng, Alex Yong Sheng, Wang, Yong, Nguyen, Dan-Thien, Tee, Si Yin, Lim, Carina Yi Jing, Tan, Xian Yi, Ng, Man-Fai, Xu, Jianwei, Seh, Zhi Wei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 23.06.2021
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Summary:Room-temperature sodium–sulfur batteries have potential in stationary applications, but challenges such as loss of active sulfur and low electrical conductivity must be solved. Nitrogen-doped nanocarbon host cathodes have been employed in metal–sulfur batteries: polar interactions mitigate the loss of sulfur, while the conductive nanostructure addresses the low conductivity. Nevertheless, these two properties run contrary to each other as greater nitrogen-doping of nanocarbon hosts is associated with lower conductivity. Herein, we investigate the polarity–conductivity dilemma to determine which of these properties have the stronger influence on cycling performance. Lower carbonization temperatures produce more pyridinic nitrogen and pyrrolic nitrogen, which from density functional theory calculations preferentially bind discharge products (Na2S and short-chain polysulfides). Despite its lower conductivity, the highly doped composite showed better Coulombic efficiency and stability, retaining a high capacity of 980 mAh g(S) –1 after 800 cycles. Our findings represent a paradigm shift where nitrogen-doping should be prioritized in designing shuttle-free, long-life sodium–sulfur batteries.
ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c01763