Polymer-sulfur composite materials for electrodes in Li-S energy storage devices
09929429 ยท 2018-03-27
Assignee
Inventors
- Jun Liu (Richland, WA)
- Yuliang Cao (Wuhan, CN)
- Lifen Xiao (Wuhan, CN)
- Jie Xiao (Richland, WA)
- Gregory J. Exarhos (Richland, WA)
- Birgit Schwenzer (Richland, WA)
- Zimin Nie (Richland, WA)
Cpc classification
C08F34/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01B1/128
ELECTRICITY
Y02E60/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B82Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01B1/127
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B82Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01B1/04
ELECTRICITY
C08G75/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C08F34/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01M4/36
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/58
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Composite materials containing sulfurized polymers and sulfur-containing particles can be used in lithium-sulfur energy storage devices as a positive electrode. The composite material exhibits relatively high capacity retention and high charge/discharge cycle stability. In one particular instance, the composite comprises a sulfurized polymer having chains that are cross-linked through sulfur bonds. The polymer provides a matrix in which sulfide and/or polysulfide intermediates formed during electrochemical charge-discharge processes of sulfur can be confined through chemical bonds and not mere physical confinement or sorption.
Claims
1. A lithium-sulfur energy storage device having a positive electrode comprising a composite material, the composite material comprising a sulfurized polymer having cross-linked chains through sulfur bonds and further comprising sulfide particles, polysulfide particles, or both, the sulfide particles, polysulfide particles, or both, are not bonded to the sulfurized polymer but are confined in the composite material by the polymer cross-linked chains, the device configured to have a reversible capacity of at least 600 mAhg.sup.1 when operated.
2. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the positive electrode further comprises sulfur particles, the sulfur particles not bonded to the sulfurized polymer but distributed among the chains.
3. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the polymer comprises sulfurized polyaniline (SPANI).
4. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, further comprising functional groups attached to the polymer chains.
5. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 4, wherein the functional groups are amine groups, imine groups, or both.
6. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the composite material is electrically conductive.
7. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the composite material further comprises nanotubes.
8. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the positive electrode further comprises a layer comprising a conductive carbon material contacting the composite material.
9. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 8, wherein the conductive carbon material comprises graphene.
10. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, further comprising a conductive carbon material distributed throughout the composite material.
11. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 10, wherein the conductive carbon material comprises graphene.
12. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the positive electrode has a sulfurized polymer-to-sulfide/polysulfide-particles weight ratio between 2.5 and 0.7.
13. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the sulfurized polymer has a sulfur content between 25 wt% and 60 wt%.
14. The lithium-sulfur energy storage device of claim 1, wherein the sulfide particles, the polysulfide particles, or both are crystalline.
15. A lithium-sulfur energy storage device comprises a negative electrode comprising lithium and a positive electrode comprising a composite material, the composite material comprising sulfurized polyaniline (SPANI) polymer having cross-linked chains through sulfur bonds and having nanoparticles comprising sulfide anions, nanoparticles comprising polysulfide anions, or both, wherein the sulfide anion nanoparticles, the polysulfide anion nanoparticles, or both, are not bonded to the sulfurized polyaniline (SPANI) polymer but are confined among the sulfurized polyaniline (SPANI) polymer chains located between the nanoparticles, the device configured to have a reversible capacity of at least 600 mAh g.sup.1 when operated.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments of the invention are described below with reference to the following accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) It will be clear from this description of the invention that the invention is not limited to these illustrated embodiments but that the invention also includes a variety of modifications and embodiments thereto. Therefore the present description should be seen as illustrative and not limiting. While the invention is susceptible of various modifications and alternative constructions, it should be understood, that there is no intention to limit the invention to the specific form disclosed, but, on the contrary, the invention is to cover all modifications, alternative constructions, and equivalents falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the claims.
(14) The following includes a description of one embodiment of the present invention, in which a flexible interwoven sulfurized polyaniline (SPANI, hereafter) is designed to imbed sulfur in the form of a SPANI/S composite. The soluble long chain polysulfides produced during repeated cycling are effectively constrained within the SPANI spatial network through both physical and chemical interactions. Even after 500 cycles a capacity retention rate of 68% is observed in the S/SPANI composite with a reversible capacity of around 600 mAh g.sup.1. According to this embodiment, the framework of the elastic SPANI polymer functions in such a way that the volume of SPANI varies along with the S content, thereby addressing the dislocation issue of sulfur. The embodiment includes amine groups and/or imine groups decorated on SPANI surface, which can further interact or attract soluble polysulfide anions.
(15) Polyaniline (PANI) was first synthesized by a chemical oxidative method. 0.9 mL of aniline was dissolved in 80 mL of 1.5 mol L.sup.1 HCl with stirring. A 2.28 g portion of (NH.sub.4).sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8 was dissolved in 20 mL of deionized water and then quickly added to the above solution. The mixture was stirred constantly at room temperature for 12 h. The PANI solid product was washed with deionized water until the filtrate became colorless and neutral and then dried at 50 C. overnight. SPANI/S composites were synthesized as follows: 0.3, 0.35 and 0.4 g of sulfur were thoroughly dissolved in 2 mL of carbon disulfide (CS.sub.2) respectively. Then 0.2, 0.15, and 0.1 g of PANI were added respectively in sequence into the above three solutions and dispersed uniformly under constant stirring. The mixtures were further stirred until the CS.sub.2 solvent was completely evaporated. The solid mixtures obtained from this procedure were heated in a sealed vessel filled with argon gas at 155 C. for 12 h and further heated at 280 C. for 12 h to perform the sulfur vulcanization reaction. The products were designated as SPANI/S-28, SPANI/S-35 and SPANI/S-55, respectively, according to the composition and the net elemental sulfur contents based on the thermogravimetric (TG) analysis. For the sake of property comparison, another portion of a mixture composed of 0.3 g of sulfur and 0.2 g of PANI was heated at 155 C. for 12 h; the product obtained was designated as PANI/S-58 according to the TG test. Without the subsequent heat treatment, the PANI/S-58 sample lacked substantial cross-linking of the PANI chains. Furthermore, for comparative purposes, some SPANI/S composites were washed with CS.sub.2 to remove any elemental sulfur; the washed products were designated as SPANI. Mesoporous carbon was used for electrochemical impedance spectra.
(16) The various samples were characterized using the following techniques and instruments. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) experiments were performed on an FEI HELIOS NANOLAB dual-beam focused ion beam/scanning electron microscope (FIB/SEM). X-ray diffraction (XRD) characterization was carried out on a PHILIPS XPERT X-ray diffractometer using Cu K radiation at =1.54 at 40 min.sup.1 in 10-80 Nitrogen adsorption-desorption isotherms for surface-area and pore analysis were measured using a QUANTACHROME AUTOSORB Automated Gas Sorption System. Thermal gravimetric analysis was conducted on a METTLER TOLEDO TGA/DSC 1 thermogravimetric analyzer in argon at a scan rate of 10 C./min from room temperature to 800 C. Ramam spectra were excited using 25 mW of 488 nm excitation from a coherent INNOVA 300 C cw argon ion laser. Backscattered light was analyzed using a SPEX TRIPLEMATE Spectrometer (Model 1877). Ten scans of 30 s exposure time was signal averaged. XPS measurements were performed with a PHYSICAL ELECTRONICS QUANTERA Scanning X-ray Microprobe. This system uses a focused monochromatic Al K X-ray (1486.7 eV) source for excitation and a spherical section analyzer. The instrument has a 32 element multichannel detection system. A 100 W X-ray beam focused to 100 m diameter was rastered over a 1.4 mm0.1 mm rectangle on the sample. The X-ray beam is incident normal to the sample and the photoelectron detector is at 45 off-normal. High energy resolution spectra were collected using a pass-energy of 69.0 eV with a step size of 0.125 eV. For the Ag 3d5/2 line, these conditions produced a FWHM of 0.91 eV. The sample experienced variable degrees of charging. Low energy electrons at 1 eV, 20 A and low energy Ar.sup.+ ions were used to minimize this charging.
(17) For electrochemical tests, a cathode was prepared by mixing 80 wt % of the active composite, 10 wt % Super P (TIMCAL, graphite & carbon Inc.), and 10 wt % of polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF, Alfa Aesar) dissolved in N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP, Aldrich) to form a slurry which was then pasted to an Al foil substrate. Electrochemical tests were performed using 2325 coin cells with lithium metal as the counter electrode. The electrolyte was 1 M lithium bis(trifluoromethane)sulfonamide (LiTFSI) (99.95% trace metals basis, Aldrich) dissolved in a mixture of 1,3-dioxolane (DOL) and dimethyoxyethane (DME) (1:1 by volume). The separator was a CELGARD 3501 microporous membrane. The cells were assembled in an argon-filled glove box. The galvanostatic charge-discharge test was conducted by a BT-2043 ARBIN Battery Testing System. Cyclic voltammograms and electrochemical impedance spectra were obtained from a SOLARTRON SI 1287 electrochemical interface.
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(20) However, the spectrum of this composite (i.e., PANI/S-58) upon further heat treatment (e.g., at 280 C.), yields SPANI/S-28, which shows distinct differences. Referring to
(21) In one embodiment, as illustrated in
(22) To further confirm the vulcanization reaction, Raman spectroscopy was also performed on the as-prepared composites. As shown in
(23) The SPANI/S composites (SPANI/S-28, SPANI/S-35 and SPAN1/S-55) synthesized at 280 C. present similar Raman spectra. The bands in the low wavenumber range (100-500 cm.sup.1) are consistent with elemental sulfur, indicating that elemental sulfur does exist in the composites. However, the bands at medium to high wavenumbers (600-1700 cm.sup.1) are obviously different from those seen in pure PANI (
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(25) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Binding energies (eV) with their corresponding atomic concentrations and peak full widths at half maximum (in parentheses: area % and eV. respectively) of S 2p.sub.3/2 component peaks of different composites. Component 1 is representative of elemental sulfur form while component 2 corresponds to organic disulfides environments. Composite Component 1 Component 2 PANI/S-58 164.2 (85, 1.11) 163.8 (15, 0.60) SPANI/S-28 164.1 (42, 1.03) 163.6 (58, 0.87) SPANI/S-35 164.0 (50, 1.03) 163.5 (50, 0.80) SPANI/S-55 164.0 (54, 1.13) 163.5 (46, 0.88)
In the case of PANI/S-58, the S 2p.sub.3/2 component peaks of the two doublets are centered at 164.2 eV and 163.8 eV, respectively. The S 2p.sub.3/2 peak positioned at 164.2 eV is up to cyclic octa-atomic elemental sulfur. The S 2p.sub.3/2 peak positioned at lower binding energy (163.8 eV) appears to be associated with sulfur linked on the aromatic rings, since sulfur in this chemical environment should have a higher electron density than in its neutral form due to the electron-donating character of the phenyl rings. Therefore, the binding energy will decrease accordingly. This data is also in agreement with that seen for poly(Phenylene Sulfide) (163.8 eV) and poly(benzenethiol) (163.6 eV). As can be seen in Table 2, 85% of sulfur is present in a neutral form in PANI/S-58, implying that only a small portion of the sulfur has chemically interacted with polyaniline at 155 C. It has to be noted that the corresponding area cannot be used for quantitative analysis, as a portion of elemental sulfur will sublime in the ultra high vacuum system during XPS analysis. However, the data can still be used qualitatively to understand the relative composition of sulfur in the two chemical environments.
(26) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Results of elemental compositions, S/C atomic ratios on SPANI backbone. BET and TG data of different composites. BET/ Elemental analysis/wt. % m.sup.2 g.sup.1 S C N H TG/% S/C PANI/S-58 4.80 ~58 SPANI/S-28 8.00 61.1 29.1 5.03 1.08 ~28 0.43 SPANI/S-35 4.67 73.1 22.2 3.74 0.73 ~35 0.63 SPANI/S-55 1.08 83.3 14.3 3.60 0.50 ~55 0.72 * BET of neat PANI is 32.0 m.sup.2 g.sup.1.
Compared with PANI/S-58, The S 2p.sub.3/2 peaks of SPANI/S composites corresponding to sulfur connected with aromatic rings shift about 0.2-0.3 eV towards lower binding energy, indicating that the interactions between sulfur and aromatic rings get strengthened after the vulcanization reaction. At the same time, the S 2p.sub.3/2 peaks corresponding to elemental sulfur shift about 0.1-0.2 eV towards lower binding energy, implying that its chemical environment is slightly changed as well. In addition, as can be seen from Table 2, the S 2p.sub.3/2 peak areas of the SPANI/S corresponding to elemental sulfur increase with the sulfur contents of the composites, confirming reasonableness of the fits.
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(28) Elemental analysis shown in Table 2 indicates that the sulfur contents in the SPANI/S-28, SPANI/S-35 and SPANI/S-55 composites are 61.1, 73.1 and 83.3 wt %, which are close to the original amounts of 60, 70 and 80 wt % sulfur, respectively. TG data show that the pure elemental sulfur content is 28, 35, and 55 wt %, respectively. Therefore, the S/C molar ratios calculated for SPANI are 0.43, 0.63 and 0.72 for SPANI/S-28, SPANI/S-35 and SPANI/S-55 respectively according to the elemental analysis and TG results. The S/C molar ratios increase with the increased initial sulfur content. When the original sulfur content is 60 wt %, about 3 H atoms on each benzene ring are substituted by sulfur. While the original sulfur content increase to 70 and 80 wt %, all of the 4 H atoms on each benzene ring are substituted. Based on the above FTIR analysis, the quinoid ring units in SPANI are less than that seen in the pure PANI (y>x); concurrently, the vulcanization reaction may occur at any neighboring two benzene rings leading to the formation of both inter- and intra molecular-chain organic SS bonds. Thus, the possible structural formula of SPANI can be written as shown in scheme 1b. This structure also is in accord with the results from aforementioned FTIR, Raman and XPS spectra.
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(31) As the backbone of the composite is SPANI, it is necessary to investigate intrinsic electrochemical properties and capacity contribution. In order to get pure SPANI, CS.sub.2 was used to dissolve the elementary sulfur out of the polymer. Unfortunately, there is still about 10% sulfur that cannot be completely removed from SPANI which is confirmed by TGA and Raman spectrometry. It is possible that some sulfur is deeply entrained in the SPANI network or has strong interactions with the polymer backbone chains precluding complete removal. The CV curve of the SPANI sample (with residual sulfur) appears in
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(33) To exclude the capacity contribution from the SPANI polymer itself, the galvanostatic charge/discharge curves of SPANI are shown in
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(37) The electrochemical reaction of the sulfur cathode is a complicated process involving a series of electron transfer reactions, coupled with the repeated dissolution/deposition of the sulfur species. The structural reconstruction of the electrode inevitably occurs during cycling. It was found that the thickness of a carbon/sulfur composite electrode changes by about 22% after one discharge/charge cycle. In fact, the capacity fading mechanism of sulfur electrodes, especially at higher sulfur loading, is due to physical cracking of the electrode structure. Thus, the mechanical strength of the conductive supporting matrix becomes particularly important.
(38) The excellent cycling stability and rate performance are firstly related to the SPANI polymer framework formed by the in-situ vulcanization reaction which effectively constrains sulfur and the intermediate lithium polysulfides. As confirmed from the Raman spectra, elemental sulfur already has certain chemical interactions with the polymer backbone during heating process. The incorporation of sulfur in the SPANI matrix is similar as a capsule in which SPANI is tightly coated on the sulfur surface with the aid of chemical interactions formed during vulcanization. Significant differences exist between as-formed S/SPANI and traditional S/carbon composites. In the conventional S/C composites the soluble polysulfides can be considered as water in a broken bucket in which the hard container (carbon) can only slow down the leaking process if the hole size (pore size of carbon) on the bucket is tuned appropriately. In this S/SPANI design, however, the bucket or the container itself becomes elastic during charge/discharge, which is the second critical factor to stabilize polysulfides. During discharge, the sulfur is converted into polysulfide and Li.sub.2S increasing the volume of the active material. Meanwhile a fraction of disulfide bonds connected on the SPANI polymer split into dithiolate form during discharge, thus the polymer matrix then can expand concurrently with the transition from S to Li.sub.2S. During the next charge, the volume of Li.sub.2S shrinks when it turns back to sulfur while the disulfide bonds recombine therefore reduces the polymer volume simultaneously. In other words, SPANI functions as a self-breathing framework to accommodate the volume changes of sulfur during electrochemical reactions. SPANI backbones effectively hold the water (soluble polysulfides) like an adjustable soft bucket. Therefore the mechanical stress arising from the electrochemical reaction is more effectively alleviated than using other ceramic materials or carbon matrix composites benefitting the long-term cycling stability of the composite electrode.
(39) This self-accommodation ability of SPANI network also explains well the aforementioned activation process observed in the cycling performance. During each expansion process more new surface areas of SPANI are exposed to sulfur and more soluble polysulfides which are then in turn chemically bonded to the polymer matrix. Those chemically adsorbed active species effectively get involved in the whole electrochemical process gradually increasing the utilization rate of element sulfur in the first tens of cycles until a kinetic equilibrium is built.
(40) Finally the influences from the amine and imine groups on the SPANI main chain cannot be ignored since they are electropositive and grafting the negative polysulfide ions in the vicinity of the polymer framework in a way more akin to chemical bonding than mere physical absorption.
(41) Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy of the SPANI/S-55 composite was carried out on the completely charged state of the material after respective cycles as shown in
(42) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 EIS Parameters of SPANI/S-55 electrode during different cycles derived from the equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 8b and mesoporous carbon/S electrode during first cycle derived from the equivalent circuit shown in literature. Cycle number/n R1/ R2/ R3/ R4/ SPANI/S-55 1 1.64 11.2 46.0 45.0 20 2.16 13.5 16.8 21.2 50 3.63 22.0 2.13 4.29 100 3.67 22.6 1.45 8.79 MCS 1 1.08 17.9 84.9
Results indicate that the solution (R1) and surface film resistance grow gradually, probably caused by some insoluble Li.sub.2S accumulated on the electrode surface. The charge transfer resistance of elemental sulfur shows a descending trend, indicating the continuous immersion of the electrolyte increases the reactive contact area. Also the electrode structural evolution during cycling, which enhances the electrochemical reaction kinetics, may also favor a reduction of the charge transfer resistance. However, the impedance corresponding to the SPANI electrochemical reaction first decreases then slightly increases. The initial immersion into the electrolyte can enhance the polymer's electrode reaction kinetics. An increasing number of disulfide bonds participated in the reaction while some of the dissociated disulfide bonds could not recover to the original crosslinked state, thus impeding the SPANI electrochemical reaction in subsequent cycles. This explanation is supported by changes in the capacity of the SPANI electrode which increases in the first 50 cycles and then gradually decays in later cycles (
(43) While a number of embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many changes and modifications may be made without departing from the invention in its broader aspects. The appended claims, therefore, are intended to cover all such changes and modifications as they fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.