Cobalt and Molybdenum Carbide Nanoparticles Grafted on Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Nanotubes as Efficient Chemical Anchors and Polysulfide Conversion Catalysts for Lithium-Sulfur Batteries

  • Xiangyang Zhou
  • , Liang Li
  • , Juan Yang
  • , Lei Xu
  • , Jingjing Tang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The practical applications of lithium-sulfur (Li−S) batteries are mainly hindered by the shuttle effect of soluble polysulfides and the slow kinetics of polysulfide conversion. Herein, a multi-component material with cobalt and molybdenum carbide nanoparticles grafted on bamboo-like N-doped carbon nanotubes (Co−Mo2C@NCNTs) is fabricated and applied to modify the separator to suppress polysulfide migration and to promote polysulfide conversion. The uniformly distributed Co and Mo2C nanoparticles act as both the adsorbent to capture the polysulfides with Co−S and Mo−S bonds by Lewis acid-base interactions and the catalyst to further accelerate the reaction kinetics of polysulfide transformation. Consequently, the Li−S batteries with the Co−Mo2C@NCNTs-coated separator deliver a high specific capacity of 1324 mAh g−1 at 0.2 C and a capacity decay rate of 0.068 % per cycle at 1 C for 500 cycles. The results suggest the efficient chemical anchoring and catalysis of the multifunctional Co−Mo2C@NCNTs composite as a feasible method for future large-scale applications of high-performance Li−S batteries.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3767-3775
Number of pages9
JournalChemElectroChem
Volume7
Issue number18
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Sep 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • MoC grafting
  • cobalt
  • lithium-sulfur batteries
  • modified separators
  • polysulfide shuttling effect

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