High
areal performance from high cathode mass loading is an essential
requirement to bring battery chemistries beyond the lithium (Li) ion,
such as lithium–sulfur (Li–S) or lithium–selenium
(Li–Se), toward practical applications. These conversion chemistry
cathodes have been typically prepared by using conventional slurry-based
techniques widely used for Li ion battery electrodes, requiring the
use of solvent and binder and multiple steps such as mixing, casting,
drying, and collecting and proper disposing of organic solvents. To
increase active material mass loading, the processing steps become
even more time-consuming when multiple casting-drying cycles are needed.
Here we report an extremely facile procedure to prepare ultrahigh
mass loading (>15 mg/cm2) with high active material
content
(>70%) conversion chemistry cathodes in a single step directly
from
neat active material, such as sulfur (S), selenium (Se), or selenium
sulfide (SeS2), without the need of solvent or binder.
This is achieved by the use of holey graphene (hG), a unique lightweight
material that can be dry pressed by itself or as a host into neat
or composite electrode forms. In the electrode preparation, hG, the
neat active material, and hG are sequentially added to the pressing
die, resulting in a sandwich architecture containing a neat active
material layer with conveniently tunable ultrahigh mass loading. The
sandwich electrodes exhibit excellent overall electrochemical performance
with great active material utilization. Mechanistically, when Se is
used as the example active material, the neat Se layer becomes electrochemically
redistributed throughout the entire cathode thickness after the first
cycle. The sandwich cathode not only does not crack or fail but also
spontaneously densifies for stable and prolonged cycling. The sandwich
electrode architecture is also compatible with the use of a fluorinated
electrolyte solvent to significantly reduce polyselenide solubility
and shuttling for improved cycling performance. Such sandwich electrodes
from the hG-enabled, one-step, dry-press method offer an attractive
fast fabrication option in bulk production of ultrahigh mass loading
cathodes for practical applications.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.