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Flower‐Like Interlayer‐Expanded MoS<sub>2−</sub><i><sub>x</sub></i> Nanosheets Confined in Hollow Carbon Spheres with High‐Efficiency Electrocatalysis Sites for Advanced Sodium–Sulfur Battery
85
Citations
45
References
2021
Year
Low‐cost Energy StorageEngineeringChemistryAdvanced Sodium–sulfur BatteryHollow CarbonChemical EngineeringSodium BatteryHybrid MaterialsMaterials ScienceBattery Electrode MaterialsAdvanced Electrode MaterialEnergy StorageSolid-state BatteryPolysulfide AdsorptionElectrochemistryNanomaterialsLi-ion Battery MaterialsElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteriesRoom‐temperature Sodium–sulfurHigh‐efficiency Electrocatalysis Sites
Abstract The room‐temperature sodium–sulfur (RT‐Na/S) battery is one of the most promising technologies for low‐cost energy storage. However, application of RT‐Na/S batteries is currently impeded by severe shuttle effects and volume expansion that limits both energy density and cycling stability. Herein, first, the first‐principal calculation is used to find that the introduction of sulfur vacancies in MoS 2 can effectively enhance polysulfide adsorption and catalytic ability as well as both the ion and electron conductivities. Then, unique MoS 2− x /C composite spheres are further designed and synthesized with flower‐like few‐layer and interlayer‐enlarged MoS 2− x nanosheets space‐confined in hollow carbon nanospheres by a “ship‐in‐a‐bottle” strategy. With this novel design, the mass loading of S in the MoS 2− x /C composite can be reached to as high as 75 wt%. Owing to the synergetic effect of interlayer‐expanded and few‐layer MoS 2− x nanosheets and hollow carbon spheres matrix with high electronic/Na + conductivity, the RT‐Na/S batteries deliver highly stable cycle durability (capacity retention of 85.2% after 100 cycles at 0.1 A g −1 ) and remarkable rate capability (415.7 mAh g −1 at 2 A g −1 ) along with high energy density. This design strategy of defect‐ and interlayer‐engineering may find wide applications in synthesizing electrode materials for high‐performance RT‐Na/S batteries.
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