“…To date, many types of materials, including metals (e.g., Pt, Fe, Ni, and Co), oxides (e.g., MnO 2 Ti 4 O 7 , VO 2 , Fe 3 O 4 , TiO 2− x , and WO 3− x ), sulfides (e.g., CoS 2 , Mo 6 S 8 , MoS 2 , WS 2 , Sb 2 S 3 , VS 4 , and Co 3 S 4 ), nitrides (e.g., VN, Co 4 N, and TiN), phosphides (e.g., MoP and Ni 2 P), carbides (e.g., TiC, NbC, and W 2 C), metal‐free compounds (e.g., black P, doped carbon, BN, and C 3 N 4 ), and their derived heterostructured materials (e.g., TiO 2 /MXenes) have been studied as effective catalysts for boosting the oxygen vacancy conversion reactions in Li–S batteries. [ 332–340 ] Furthermore, some emerging research directions on this topic include i) the rational design of heterostructured materials (e.g., TiO 2 /Ni 3 S 2 ) as bidirectional catalysts for both oxidation and reduction reactions, [ 341 ] ii) the use of single atom/clusters‐based catalysts (e.g., Zn/MXenes and Mo/CNTs) capable of maximizing catalytic ability, [ 342,343 ] and iii) the design of catalyst–electrolyte interfaces for strong chemisorption and good electrocatalytic activity. [ 344,345 ] Despite the significant progress in the field of Li–S batteries, in‐depth mechanistic investigations on the fundamental polymorphism transition manipulation and catalytic activity in Li–S batteries are lacking, and are expected to be conducted in the future using advanced visual characterization techniques.…”