Sulfur-Grafted Hollow Carbon Spheres for Potassium-Ion Battery Anodes

Adv Mater. 2019 Jul;31(30):e1900429. doi: 10.1002/adma.201900429. Epub 2019 Jun 3.

Abstract

Sulfur-rich carbons are minimally explored for potassium-ion batteries (KIBs). Here, a large amount of S (38 wt%) is chemically incorporated into a carbon host, creating sulfur-grafted hollow carbon spheres (SHCS) for KIB anodes. The SHCS architecture provides a combination of nanoscale (≈40 nm) diffusion distances and CS chemical bonding to minimize cycling capacity decay and Coulombic efficiency (CE) loss. The SHCS exhibit a reversible capacity of 581 mAh g-1 (at 0.025 A g-1 ), which is the highest reversible capacity reported for any carbon-based KIB anode. Electrochemical analysis of S-free carbon spheres baseline demonstrates that both the carbon matrix and the sulfur species are highly electrochemically active. SHCS also show excellent rate capability, achieving 202, 160, and 110 mAh g-1 at 1.5, 3, and 5 A g-1 , respectively. The electrode maintains 93% of the capacity from the 5th to 1000th cycle at 3 A g-1 , with steady-state CE being near 100%. Raman analysis indicates reversible breakage of CS and SS bonds upon potassiation to 0.01 V versus K/K+ . The galvanostatic intermittent titration technique (GITT) analysis provides voltage-dependent K+ diffusion coefficients that range from 10-10 to 10-12 cm2 s-1 upon potassiation and depotassiation, with approximately five times higher coefficient for the former.

Keywords: KIBs; carbon anodes; potassium-ion batteries; sulfur-doped carbons.