Spatial and Kinetic Regulation of Sulfur Electrochemistry on Semi-Immobilized Redox Mediators in Working Batteries

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2020 Sep 28;59(40):17670-17675. doi: 10.1002/anie.202007740. Epub 2020 Aug 11.

Abstract

Use of redox mediators (RMs) is an effective strategy to enhance reaction kinetics of multi-electron sulfur electrochemistry. However, the soluble small-molecule RMs usually aggravate the internal shuttle and thus further reduce the battery efficiency and cyclability. A semi-immobilization strategy is now proposed for RM design to effectively regulate the sulfur electrochemistry while circumvent the inherent shuttle issue in a working battery. Small imide molecules as the model RMs were co-polymerized with moderate-chained polyether, rendering a semi-immobilized RM (PIPE) that is spatially restrained yet kinetically active. A small amount of PIPE (5 % in cathode) extended the cyclability of sulfur cathode from 37 to 190 cycles with 80 % capacity retention at 0.5 C. The semi-immobilization strategy helps to understand RM-assisted sulfur electrochemistry in alkali metal batteries and enlightens the chemical design of active additives for advanced electrochemical energy storage devices.

Keywords: cathode electrochemistry; kinetics regulation; lithium-sulfur batteries; redox mediators; sulfur redox reactions.