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The Li-S battery has emerged as a promising next-generation system for advanced energy storage. Notwithstanding the recent progress, the problematic polysulfide shuttling, retarded sulfur redox, and low output of volumetric capacity remain daunting challenges toward its practicability. In response, this work demonstrates herein a universal approach to craft MO-MXene (M: Ti, V, and Nb) heterostructures as heavy and multifunctional hosts to harvest good battery performances with synchronous polysulfide immobilization and conversion. Theoretical calculations indicate that the implanted oxides boost the reaction kinetics of polysulfide transformation without affecting the intrinsic conductivity of MXene. As a result, the representative VO-VC/S electrode enables a high volumetric capacity (offering 1645.98 mAh cm at 0.2 C) and cycling stability (retaining 631.17 mAh cm after 1500 cycles at 2.0 C with a capacity decay of 0.03% per cycle). More encouragingly, 3D-printed sulfur electrodes harnessing VO-VC hosts readily harvest an areal capacity of 9.74 mAh cm at 0.05 C under an elevated sulfur loading of 10.78 mg cm, holding promise for the development of practically viable Li-S batteries.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.0c07999 | DOI Listing |
Nanomicro Lett
June 2024
Laboratory of Advanced Materials, Shanghai Key Lab of Molecular Catalysis and Innovative Materials, Academy for Engineering and Technology, Fudan University, Shanghai, 200438, People's Republic of China.
The exploration of novel multivariate heterostructures has emerged as a pivotal strategy for developing high-performance electromagnetic wave (EMW) absorption materials. However, the loss mechanism in traditional heterostructures is relatively simple, guided by empirical observations, and is not monotonous. In this work, we presented a novel semiconductor-semiconductor-metal heterostructure system, Mo-MXene/Mo-metal sulfides (metal = Sn, Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Zn, and Cu), including semiconductor junctions and Mott-Schottky junctions.
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