Boosting Polysulfide Redox Kinetics by Temperature-Induced Metal-Insulator Transition Effect of Tungsten-Doped Vanadium Dioxide for High-Temperature Lithium-Sulfur Batteries

Small. 2024 Mar;20(13):e2307040. doi: 10.1002/smll.202307040. Epub 2023 Nov 15.

Abstract

The practical application of Li-S batteries is still severely restricted by poor cyclic performance caused by the intrinsic polysulfides shuttle effect, which is even more severe under the high-temperature condition owing to the inevitable increase of polysulfides' solubility and diffusion rate. Herein, tungsten-doped vanadium dioxide (W-VO2) micro-flowers are employed with first-order metal-insulator phase transition (MIT) property as a robust and multifunctional modification layer to hamper the shuttle effect and simultaneously improve the thermotolerance of the common separator. Tungsten doping significantly reduces the transition temperature from 68 to 35 °C of vanadium dioxide, which renders the W-VO2 easier to turn from the insulating monoclinic phase into the metallic rutile phase. The systematic experiments and theoretical analysis demonstrate that the temperature-induced in-suit MIT property endows the W-VO2 catalyst with strong chemisorption against polysulfides, low energy barrier for liquid-to-solid conversion, and outstanding diffusion kinetics of Li-ion under high temperatures. Benefiting from these advantages, the Li-S batteries with W-VO2 modified separator exhibit significantly improved rate and long-term cyclic performance under 50 °C. Remarkably, even at an elevated temperature (80 °C), they still exhibit superior electrochemical performance. This work opens a rewarding avenue to use phase-changing materials for high-temperature Li-S batteries.

Keywords: electrocatalysis; lithium‐sulfur batteries; metal‐insulator transition; separator modification; vanadium dioxide.