Efficient and durable electrocatalysts are important for polysulfide conversion in high-performance Li-S batteries. Herein, we report a sacrificial template strategy to synthesize a sulfur/nitrogen-codoped carbon-supported manganese (Mn) single-atom catalyst (Mn/SNC). The synthesis is enabled by fabricating a novel precursor, i.e., cadmium sulfide (CdS) wrapped with Mn ion-impregnated polyporrole (CdS@Mn-PPy), and subsequent pyrolysis. During pyrolysis, the CdS template is decomposed into Cd and S, PPy-derived carbon is doped with N and S, and Mn ions are reduced to Mn atoms, forming Mn-N active sites. The evaporation of Cd atoms/clusters creates abundant pores in the carbon substrate to expose the active sites and facilitate ion transport, and S atoms can form edge C-S-C bonds to improve the activity of Mn-N sites. Benefiting from the above advantages, the Mn/SNC catalyst markedly enhances the performance of Li-S batteries, delivering an initial capacity of 1563.7 mAh g-1 at 0.1C, a capacity decay of only 0.037% per cycle after 1600 cycles at 2C; a capacity of 1045.1 mAh g-1 at a high sulfur loading of 7.44 mg cm-2 at 0.2C, and a capacity retention of 73.1% after 180 cycles. This work provides a strategy that may benefit further the rational design and development of single-atom catalysts for application in renewable energy.
Keywords: Li−S batteries; Mn single atom; codoped nanoporous substrate; polysulfide conversion; template method.