A Stable High-Capacity Lithium-Ion Battery Using a Biomass-Derived Sulfur-Carbon Cathode and Lithiated Silicon Anode
Vittorio Marangon, Celia Hern\'andez-Renter, Mara Olivares-Mar\'in,, Vicente G\'omez-Serrano, \'Alvaro Caballero, Juli\'an Morales, Jusef Hassoun

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a sustainable, high-capacity lithium-ion battery using a biomass-derived sulfur-carbon cathode and a lithiated silicon anode, achieving extended cycle life and promising energy storage performance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel biomass-derived sulfur-carbon cathode combined with a silicon-based anode for high-capacity, durable lithium-ion batteries.
Findings
Capacity over 1200 mAh/gS in half-cell
79% capacity retention after 100 cycles
56% capacity retention after 500 cycles
Abstract
A full lithium-ion-sulfur cell with a remarkable cycle life was achieved by combining an environmentally sustainable biomass-derived sulfur-carbon cathode and a pre-lithiated silicon oxide anode. X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, energy dispersive spectroscopy, and thermogravimetry of the cathode evidenced the disordered nature of the carbon matrix in which sulfur was uniformly distributed with a weight content as high as 75%, while scanning and transmission electron microscopy revealed the micrometric morphology of the composite. The sulfur-carbon electrode in the lithium half-cell exhibited a maximum capacity higher than 1200 mAhgS-1, reversible electrochemical process, limited electrode/electrolyte interphase resistance, and a rate capability up to C/2. The material showed a capacity decay of about 40% with respect to the steady-state value over 100 cycles, likely due to the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
