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Article

Modeling and Simulations of the Sulfur Infiltration in Activated Carbon Fabrics during Composite Cathode Fabrication for Lithium-Sulfur Batteries

by
Kyriakos Lasetta
,
Joseph Paul Baboo
and
Constantina Lekakou
*
Department of Mechanical Engineering Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, UK
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
J. Compos. Sci. 2021, 5(3), 65; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs5030065
Submission received: 19 January 2021 / Revised: 15 February 2021 / Accepted: 20 February 2021 / Published: 25 February 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Papers in Journal of Composites Science in 2020)

Abstract

:
During the manufacture of a composite cathode for lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries it is important to realize homogeneous infiltration of a specified amount of sulfur, targeted to be at least 5 mg cm−2 to achieve good battery performance in terms of high energy density. A model of the sulfur infiltration is presented in this study, taking into account the pore size distribution of the porous cathode host, phase transitions in sulfur, and formation of different sulfur allotropes, depending on pore size, formation energy and available thermal energy. Simulations of sulfur infiltration into an activated carbon fabric at a hot-plate temperature of 175 °C for two hours predicted a composite cathode with 41 wt% sulfur (8.3 mg cm−2), in excellent agreement with the experiment. The pore size distribution of the porous carbon host proved critical for both the extent and form of retained sulfur, where pores below 0.4 nm could not accommodate any sulfur, pores between 0.4 and 0.7 nm retained S4 and S6 allotropes, and pores between 0.7 and 1.5 nm contained S8.

1. Introduction

Lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries are one of the latest generation lithium batteries, pursued due to their high theoretical energy density, 2510 Wh kg−1 [1], compared to an expected maximum of 250 Wh kg−1 for conventional Li-ion batteries [2,3,4]. Li-S batteries typically comprise a lithium anode and a composite sulfur cathode, consisting of sulfur as the active cathode material and a porous host, which provides electronic conductivity and structural integrity. Such hosts include activated carbon fabrics (ACF) [5], hollow nanofibers [6], hierarchically porous carbon coatings [7,8,9,10], graphene, and graphene oxide [11,12], where oxygen groups and functional, transition metal oxide groups [9,10] trap sulfur and polysulfides and thus reduce the “shuttling” effect during battery operation, and highly conductive materials such as carbon black and multiwall carbon nanotubes [13,14]. Furthermore, the porous carbon cathode host contributes a supercapacitor element [12,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23], hence, increasing the power density of the Li-S battery. In this manner, a Li-S battery with such composite cathode is a hybridized battery/Li-ion capacitor [24], combining the high energy density of the Li-S battery and the high power density of the Li-ion capacitor (consisting of the lithium anode and porous carbon cathode), similarly to composite supercapacitors [25,26] but with much higher energy density, as the theoretical capacity of a Li-S battery reaches 1670 Ah gs−1 (where gs−1 denotes per gram of sulfur). A Li-S battery with a composite cathode can be easily recycled by disassembly [27] and liquid processing, dissolution of binder and sulfur [28,29], dielectrophoresis [30], and filtration techniques.
In order for the Li-S battery to achieve the expected high capacity and energy density, the amount of sulfur needs to be maximized in the composite cathode, recently specified above 5 mg cm−2 of cathode [31], with at least 70 wt% sulfur in the composite cathode to minimize the weight of the redox-passive carbon host [1,6,7,11,31]. The infiltration stage is critical for the homogeneous sulfur impregnation through all host material and all pore sizes, while the porous host should have the required pore volume and pore size distribution to accommodate the specified amount and proportion of sulfur. There are different sulfur infiltration techniques in the porous cathode host [32]. Melt infiltration is the most common technique [5,6,8], where sulfur powder is placed on top of a fabric or other type of scaffold host or mixed with the carbon powder and heated above its melting point, where the lowest viscosity of sulfur is at 155 °C (20 mPa s), quickly rising to 54 Pa s at 165 °C and further as it polymerizes, reaching a maximum of 940 Pa s at 190 °C and falling thereafter to 60 Pa s at 280 °C [33]. Solution infiltration is another technique [12], rarely used because there are few good solvents for sulfur, all highly toxic, and there is the problem of solvent removal, usually by solvent evaporation, which would also lead to sulfur sublimation [12] that can easily take place even at relatively low temperatures between 25 and 50 °C [34]. Vapor infiltration [35] results in impregnation of smaller pores and shorter required duration of the infiltration process [35], where isothermal vapor infiltration at 135, 155, and 175 °C took place in 50, 30, and 7 min, respectively [35]. Although it can be seen that there is an overlap between the temperatures of the melt [5,13,32,33] and vapor processing [35], no investigations have been carried out, experimentally or theoretically, to resolve the proportion of melt and vapor contribution in the infiltration process at the usual infiltration temperatures in the range of 120–155 °C [5,13,32,33].
An additional question is which pore sizes may be able to accommodate sulfur and in which allotrope form, given that solid sulfur is typically encountered as octasulfur, S8, but can also exist in other allotrope forms [36]. Activated porous carbons and graphene or graphene oxide have pore size distributions [5,9,10,24,25] including slit pores from 0.3 nm, representing interlayer spacing in graphite, 0.63 nm, and other pore sizes thereafter. While melt, solution, or vapor infiltration dynamics might resemble flow through porous media and could be modelled by Darcy’s law [37], for example, there is the question of which pore sizes can accommodate which sulfur allotropes. No theoretical, modeling, or computational study has been carried out of the sulfur infiltration of the porous carbon cathode host.
We present, for the first time, a novel model of sulfur infiltration in parallel porous paths of different pore sizes from the pore size distribution of the porous cathode host with simultaneous heat transfer. In this model, we considered both sulfur sublimation and evaporation, as well as melting, of course, and formation of different sulfur allotropes depending on the pore size compared to the sulfur allotrope molecule size and also on the available thermal energy compared to the required sulfur allotrope formation energy. Computer simulations were carried out to predict sulfur retention and distribution for different sulfur allotropes in different pore sizes and across the cathode thickness. The predictions were compared with data of sulfur retention from an experimental study with an activated carbon fabric (ACF) host.

2. Materials and Experimental Methods

The cathode host was ACF Kynol® ACC-507-15 (Kynol Europe GmbH (Hamburg, Germany): areal density of 12 mg cm−2 and specific surface area BET = 1461 m2 g−1), presented in Figure 1a,b, with a discretized pore size distribution (PSD) (Figure 1c) derived from data of nitrogen adsorption experiments [24]. The PSD started at 0.3 nm and exhibited peaks at 0.69 nm and 1.31 nm, which were in the micropore range. Micropores were expected to be of slit shape in phenolic-derived ACFs, as was the Kynol® fabric [24,38]. Figure 1b displays that macro- and mesopores of approximately circular cross section were also present and, during sulfur infiltration or battery operation, provided the transport channels for the transported species, sulfur, or ions [24], respectively, to reach the large proportion of micropores that dominated the PSD of the ACF. Sulfur powder (Sigma Aldrich, Gillingham, UK) was used as the active cathode material, via an infiltration stage into the porous ACF host.
ACF samples of 1 cm2 (12 mg) were placed on 1-cm2 aluminum foil (of 30-µm thickness, utilized as current collector in the battery cathode). Twelve mg of sulfur powder was sprinkled on the free top surface of each ACF sample. The assembly was wrapped by a single layer of aluminum foil (to entrap any sulfur vapor as much as possible), taking care for the wrap not to touch the sulfur powder. Finally, each wrapped assembly was placed in a sealed pressure vessel from stainless steel of a circular base of 160-mm diameter and height of 110 mm, as illustrated in Figure 2a. The pressure vessel was placed on a hot plate for a specified period of time. Different experiments were carried out at three different hot-plate temperatures: Tb = 150, 175, and 200 °C. External temperature monitoring was carried out during each experiment using an infrared (IR) camera (Figure 2b). On the basis of the ideal gas law, a gauge pressure range of 0–0.6 bar was estimated, where the safety valve in the pressure vessel was set to 1 bar and was never reached, i.e., the safety valve did not open in any of the experiments. It must be mentioned that the dimensions of the pressure vessel were designed so if its base allocated a maximum number of eight samples, the estimated maximum gauge pressure was below the safety valve setting of 1 bar. After 40 min and after 2 h at Tb, followed by 12 h cooling to room temperature, the samples were removed from the vessel; the 40- and 120-min experiments were independent experiments, where the 2-h experiments were not interrupted. Each sample on the current collector foil was weighed before and after sulfur powder was added, as well as at the end of the specified period of sulfur infiltration processing. Samples were examined under scanning electron microscope HR-SEM JEOL-7100 F (JEOL Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) in terms of SEM and EDX (energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy).

3. Modeling of the Sulfur Infiltration in the Porous Cathode Host

A numerical model was developed for the heat transfer and sulfur impregnation in the cathode host. On the basis of the diagram presented in Figure 2a, one-dimensional equations were assembled in the y-axis, given the small thickness of each component in the assembly.
All possible sulfur allotropes were considered for melt or low-temperature vapor [36] and the lowest energy structures were selected, as predicted by density functional theory (DFT) simulations by Jackson et al. [39]. Further molecular simulations were carried out in this study for geometrical optimization, using Avogadro, and the resulted molecular models are displayed in Figure 3a, together with the measured minimum dimension for each allotrope model and their formation energy, as calculated by Jackson et al. [39] employing DFT simulations. On the basis of the minimum dimension of each sulfur allotrope, it was deducted which allotrope may be accommodated in each pore size, as is presented for the peaks of the PSD of the porous cathode host ACF in Figure 3b. Pores smaller than 0.4 nm could not accommodate any sulfur in any form and pores smaller than 0.7 nm could not accommodate S8 and S7.
The vertical assembly of different materials during the sulfur infiltration comprised from bottom to top (also see Figure 2a):
(a)
hot-plate specified temperature: Tb;
(b)
pressure container wall from stainless steel (ρ = 8000 kg m−3; cp = 468 J kg−1 K−1; k = 16.3 W m−1 K−1) of thickness of 3 mm;
(c)
aluminium foil of wrap (ρ = 2725 kg m−3; cp = 910 J kg−1 K−1; k = 235 W m−1 K−1) of thickness of 30 µm;
(d)
aluminium foil of current collector (ρ = 2725 kg m−3; cp = 910 J kg−1 K−1; k = 235 W m−1 K−1) of thickness of 30 µm;
(e)
ACF (ρ = 240 kg m−3; specific heat capacity in J kg−1 K−1 as a function of absolute temperature T: cp = 0.0004T + 0.8133; k = 0.12 W m−1 K−1) of thickness of 500 µm;
(f)
ACF-sulfur composite consisting of ACF infiltrated with sulfur of varying thickness from 0 (non-infiltrated ACF) to 500 µm (fully infiltrated ACF);
(g)
sulfur layer of 12 mg cm−2, consisting of initially solid S8 allotrope (ρ = 2070 kg m−3; cp = 706 J kg−1 K−1; k = 0.205 W m−1 K−1) which when melt (ρ = 1819 kg m−3; cp = 975 J kg−1 K−1; k = 0.205 W m−1 K−1);
(h)
air layer (at temperature T (K) and pressure P (Pa): ρ T,P = 3.6 × 10−3 P/T in kg m−3; cp = 1010 J kg−1 K−1; k = 34 + 0.07(T − 273) in mW m−1 K−1) of thickness of 3 mm;
(i)
aluminium foil of wrap (ρ = 2725 kg m−3; cp = 910 J kg−1 K−1; k = 235 W m−1 K−1) of thickness of 30 µm;
(j)
air (at temperature T (K) and pressure P (Pa): ρ T,P = 3.6x10−3 P/T in kg m−3; cp = 1010 J kg−1 K−1; k = 34 + 0.07 (T − 273) in mW m−1 K−1) of thickness of 100 mm;
(k)
pressure container ceiling from stainless steel (ρ = 8000 kg m−3; cp = 468 J kg−1 K−1; k = 16.3 W m−1 K−1) of thickness of 3 mm.
The heat transfer equation for each single material layer, i, is given by:
T t = k i ρ i c p , i 2 T y 2 j R j DH f , Sj
where T is the temperature, t is the time, y is the vertical axis, ρ is density, cp is specific heat capacity, k is thermal conductivity, subscript i denotes layer i, and j R j DH f , Sj is the power lost due to the formation of new sulfur allotropes j. The air pressure in the container was updated according to the updated air temperature, employing the ideal gas law. The specific heat capacity of sulfur, cp,S, is given as a function of the absolute temperature, T (in K), by the following relation with the values of the constants given in Table 1 [40].
c p , S = a + bT + cT 2 + dT 3 0.032
For the composite ACF-S, the thermal diffusivity, k i ρ i c p , i , is given by the rule of mixtures, where the thermal diffusivity of the sulfur is weighted by the volume fraction of the impregnated sulfur in the ACF. At the boundaries between adjacent layers, there is heat flux continuity boundary condition, with a contact resistance, 1/hc, to take into account any non-perfect contact at the ACF/current collector interface and previous interfaces (layers (b)–(e)). A fixed boundary condition, Tb, is used at the bottom of layer (b), in contact with the hot plate. The time-changing temperature at the ceiling of the pressure container is given by the temperature at that height from the IR images, monitoring the experiment, and used as input data in the heat transfer simulation. A heat transfer coefficient of 390 W m−2 K−1 was used for the heat transfer via natural convection between the S-ACF and air [41,42] and of 2280 W m−2 K−1 between air and aluminum foil or stainless steel top plate [43].
At the sulfur melt–solid interface, with sulfur melt point at 119.7 °C, there is the boundary condition:
ρ S , m Δ H m S m t = k S , s T s y k S , m T m y
where S m t is the rate of sulfur melt generation, ΔHm is the heat of fusion of sulfur, ΔHm = 54 kJ kg−1 [40], and, for the rest of properties, subscripts s and m denote solid and melt, respectively.
Sublimation (solid-to-vapor for temperatures below 119.7 °C) and vaporization of sulfur (melt-to-vapor for temperatures above 119.7 °C) occur from the top surface of sulfur layer (g) ((g) top subscript), where a heat flux loss occurs at that boundary with the air layer boundary (h), according to the relation:
ρ S , v Δ H S , v S v t = k S , s   or   m T ( g ) top y k S , v T ( h ) y
where the heat of vaporization is Δ H S , v = 306.25 kJ kg−1 and the heat of sublimation is Δ H S , v = 360.31 kJ kg−1 [40]. The rate of generation of S vapor sulfur moles, dNS,v/dt, is given by the equation [44,45]:
dN Sv dt = A U transfer   P S , v RT
where A is the area of the top surface of layer (g), Utransfer is the mass transfer coefficient, PS,v is the sulfur vapor pressure and R is the gas constant R = 8.3145 J mol−1 K−1. The mass transfer coefficient is given by the relation [45]:
U transfer = 1.5 D S , v 0.75 g 0.25 ( 0.2 μ S , v ) 0.25
where g is gravity (g = 9.81 m s−2), µS,v is the sulfur vapor viscosity given by the linear relation against temperature fitting the experimental data from [46], as presented in Figure 4a, and DS,v is the diffusion coefficient of the sulfur vapor, given as a function of temperature, T (in K), by the following relation [44], assuming binary coefficients with air being the second vapor-phase material [44]:
D S , v = 3.3 × 10 3 T 1.5 10 5 ( 0.256 ρ S , v ) 1 / 3 + ( 0.018 ρ air ) 1 / 3 2
The sulfur vapor pressure is considered a function of temperature from the polynomial data fit of experimental data from [47], as is presented in Figure 4b.
The second system of equations describes the mass transport of each sulfur allotrope, Sj for j = 2–8 (Figure 3a), and infiltration through the porous ACF in the average y-axis and in each pore size, p, from the discretized PSD in Figure 1c:
C j , p t + F decay , j , p u p C j , p y = F decay , j , p D j , p 2 C j , p y 2 + R j r j
where Cj,p is the concentration of sulfur allotrope j in pore size p, up is the velocity in pore size p, Dj,p is the diffusion coefficient of sulfur allotrope j in pore size p, Rj is the rate of formation of new allotrope Sj in pore size dp, rj is the rate of loss of allotrope Sj due to the formation of lower order allotropes for smaller pores, and Fdecay,p is a decay factor where Fdecay,j,p = 1 for the S8 allotrope (j = 8) but depends on local thermal energy and allotrope formation energy for the lower order sulfur allotropes.
Parallel infiltration paths are considered for the different pore sizes, with the mean velocity, up, for each pore size calculated according to Darcy’s law in the same manner as matrix infiltration in a fibrous medium in composites’ manufacturing [37,48]:
u p = K p ε p μ S , m P c , p L f
where εp is the pore fraction for pores sized p, Lf is the filled length across the thickness of the porous ACF, Kp is the permeability of the porous medium for pore size dp given by the Carman–Kozeny equation for flow transverse to fibers with Kozeny constant of 3.4 [49]:
K p = ε p d p 2 4 × 3.4
Pc,p is the capillary pressure given by the Young–Laplace equation [37,50]:
P c , p = 2 σ cos θ d p
where σ is the surface tension of the infiltrating sulfur fluid, θ is its contact angle with the carbon pore walls (σ = 61 mN m−1 and θ = 4.3° [51] in this study), and μS,m is the viscosity of the sulfur melt, its value taken from experimental data depending on temperature [33] as:
119.7 °C ≤ T < 165 °C: μS,m = 0.04 Pa s
165 °C ≤ T < 185 °C: μS,m = 0.035 Pa s
185 °C ≤ T < 195 °C: μS,m = 0.92 Pa s
195 °C ≤ T: μS,m = 0.85 Pa s
Sulfur allotropes are generated (Rj) and infiltrate the pores in pore size hierarchy, as follows. All pores with dp ≥ Lmin,S8 are infiltrated by the S8 allotrope. Pores with Lmin,S8 > dp ≥ Lmin,S7 are first given the chance to be infiltrated with the S7 allotrope, if there is sufficient local thermal energy, ETh, available to overcome the formation energy of S7, DHf,S7. Otherwise, formation and infiltration of S6 is considered and consecutive smaller allotropes, pores with Lmin,S7 > dp ≥ Lmin,S6, are first given the chance to be infiltrated with the S6 allotrope, if there is sufficient local thermal energy available to overcome the formation energy of S6, DHf,S6. Otherwise, formation and infiltration of S5 is considered and consecutive smaller allotropes. The procedure continues in the same manner until pores of dp < Lmin,S2 are encountered, which cannot be infiltrated by any form of sulfur. The rate of formation of a sulfur allotrope, Rj, encompasses the full concentration of the parent allotrope (Figure 3a) for that pore size, multiplied by the decay factor, Fdecay,j,p, given by the equation [24]:
F decay , j , p = e ( DE f , Sj RT + E Th )
The diffusion coefficient of sulfur allotrope j in pore size dp is given by the following relation [17] (where kB is Boltzmann’s constant), which is a modified Einstein’s equation to take into account tortuosity and constrictivity effects [24]:
D j , p = ε p 1.5 k B T 2 π μ S , m L min , Sj ( 1 L min , Sj d p ) 4
The system of the heat transfer and sulfur transport equations was solved using the implicit time-dependent finite volume/finite difference technique [52,53]. Computer simulations were performed for the experimental process described in Section 2, at Tb = 150 °C or 175 °C or 200 °C for two alternative, specified infiltration durations: 40 min or 2 h, employing a timestep Δt = 0.1 s and a y-increment Δy = 5 µm in layers (a)–(i).

4. Results

The monitoring IR camera showed that after the hot plate reached the set temperature and the steel container with the samples was placed on the hot plate, the hot-plate temperature was disturbed and it took about 30–40 min to reach the set temperature again. From then on, the samples were left for sulfur infiltration for either 40 min or 2 h. To ensure that the correct experimental temperature profile was used, both the bottom and top temperatures of the steel container were inputted in the computer simulations from the monitoring IR camera. For hot plate-temperature Tb = 150 °C, the sulfur powder did not melt and was still on top of the ACF samples when the steel container was opened, after either 40 min or 2 h. The computational simulations predicted an end, steady-state temperature of 109.88 °C at the top of the ACF sample, which was below the sulfur melting temperature, which justified the experimental result.
The computational simulations predicted an end, steady-state temperature of 125.55 °C and 146.8 °C at the top of the sulfur layer for initially set, experimental hot-plate temperatures of 175 and 200 °C, respectively. These steady state temperatures at the top of ACF were then above the sulfur melting point.
Figure 5 displays the predicted total mass of sulfur (in the form of any allotrope) that infiltrated the porous ACF and also and in top sulfur layer as a function of the infiltration time, for the two, set, hot-plate temperatures, 175 and 200 °C. It also compares the predictions with the experimental data of the weight gain after sulfur infiltration of 40 min and 2 h. Initially, the sulfur was approximately 12 mg cm−2, same as the amount of sulfur added initially. Sulfur evaporation or sublimation seemed to start slowly and then accelerated as the sample was heated and continued until the sulfur started impregnating meso- and micropores, where the numerical model considered that it was trapped without vapor escape from the ACF. In the simulations, sulfur seemed to impregnate and stay in the macropores for longer in the samples at set, hot-plate temperature, Tb = 175 °C, from which it may have evaporated faster due to the larger surface area of macropores, compared with the assumed flat surface of the sulfur layer at the top of ACF. Hence, there was faster initial sulfur evaporation for Tb = 175 °C, compared to the samples at Tb = 200 °C. However, overall, more sulfur evaporated until the end for the samples at Tb = 200 °C, which was attributed to the higher temperature resulting in higher vapor pressure, as seen in Figure 4b. As a result, the set hot-plate temperature Tb = 175 °C is recommended, provided that the sulfur is distributed homogeneously through the thickness of the ACF sample and there is no accumulated sulfur layer at the top or bottom surface on the sample. This was investigated, both in the predictions and experimentally, in the rest of this study.
Figure 6 and Figure 7 present the SEM/EDX element maps of sulfur and carbon of the top surface and cross section, respectively, of ACF samples after being impregnated with sulfur for 40 and 120 min for set, hot-plate temperature Tb = 200 or 175 °C. In general, it can be seen that there was no sulfur present in the interfiber space and the sulfur impregnated very well the AC fibers. The cross sections in Figure 7 are from samples cut after their sulfur impregnation. Figure 7 illustrates that sulfur impregnated homogeneously across the whole thickness of the sample, without any accumulation at the top or the bottom of the sample. No leftover, unimpregnated sulfur was detected in any of the case studies: Tb = 200 or 175 °C, impregnation time 40 or 120 min. The cross section of one of the cut fibers of Figure 7b is presented in Figure 8, where S, C, and mixed S/C element maps depict that there was no sulfur layer surrounding the carbon fiber and, in fact, the sulfur had higher concentration in the central region of the fiber drawn by capillary flow into the micropores there. Any sulfur and carbon in the background of the fiber in Figure 8 was from the neighboring fibers, as shown in Figure 7b.
Figure 9 presents the predicted evolution of different sulfur allotropes near the bottom of the ACF. Sulfur infiltration took place in a hierarchical manner, where the large pores were infiltrated first, followed by mesopores and, lastly, by micropores. S8 entered rapidly and hierarchically the large pores that could accommodate it, i.e., dp > 0.7 nm. For pores smaller than 0.7 nm, S8 converted to S6, and then to S4 for dp < 0.65 nm.
Figure 10 presents the predicted contour plots of the sulfur concentration at the end of the 40 min and the 2 h infiltration periods, for set hot-plate temperature Tb = 175 °C. Micropores greater than 0.7 nm were impregnated with S8. Pores smaller than 0.8 nm and larger than 0.6 nm contained S6, and pores smaller than 0.64 nm and larger than 0.4 nm contained S4. The sulfur distribution was homogeneous through the ACF thickness at the end of the 2 h infiltration period. After 40 min sulfur infiltration, there was some low S8 concentration in the meso- and macropores near the top ACF surface, which was depleted in the subsequent infiltration time for the sulfur infiltration into the lower parts, while the initial top reservoir of sulfur over the ACF was exhausted. At the end of the 40 min infiltration period, S4 had not fully infiltrated yet the bottom 20% of the ACF but the S4 infiltration was completed through the whole ACF thickness at the end of the 2-h period.

5. Discussion

It is most interesting that in both the experiment and the computational simulation a sulfur loss of 59–62 wt% occurred, depending on hot-plate temperature. Sulfur vapor may have escaped outside the aluminum wrap, as after several such experiments the inner walls of the stainless steel pressure vessel obtained a shiny, yellowish hue. The heat transfer characteristics of the experimental rig greatly affected the temperature distribution and, hence, sulfur vaporization and also infiltration. Alternative experimental setups in the literature include sulfur impregnation with the sample in a convection oven [12] where, in fact, even higher degree of sulfur vaporization was observed [12]. The methodology of a sealed container on a hot plate with set hot-plate temperature, employed in this study, may represent continuous, large-scale sulfur deposition on a substrate tape moving continually on a conveyor belt. The substrate may be ACF on aluminum foil current collector, their assembly moving on the conveyor belt with sulfur powder being sprayed on top and the bed of the moving belt being heated to the set temperature. Hence, the heat transfer and sulfur infiltration model presented in this study is applicable to a scaled fabrication of composite S-ACF cathode. As sulfur loss through vaporization and sublimation is generally undesirable, process design simulations may try to optimize the temperature and external pressure to maintain sulfur infiltration in melt state rather than vapor state. This would mean that only S8 allotrope would be present, as lower-order sulfur allotropes are formed in vapor state only. As a result, cathode host micropores below 0.7 nm would not contain any sulfur and such unfilled pores would, instead, absorb and waste the electrolyte solvent of the Li-S battery without any prospect of active participation in the redox battery reactions in the absence of sulfur.
It was predicted that in pores smaller than 0.7 nm (and greater than 0.4 nm) the sulfur resides in the form of mainly S6 and S4 allotropes. The so confined sulfur in small carbon micropores cannot move to the anode so easily in a Li-S battery, which offers the advantage of limiting the “shuttling” effect in the Li-S battery [54].
However, S4 in micropores smaller than 0.64 nm, which occupy 16% of the total volume of pores sized 0.46–119 nm in the ACF of this study, reduces the capacity of the first potential plateau at 2.3–2.4 V in the discharge of a Li-S battery for some composite cathodes, as this plateau corresponds to the conversion of Li2S8 to Li2S6 [5,54]. Therefore, it can be seen that the pore size distribution of the porous carbon host is critical for both the amount and form of infiltrated sulfur, which are going to affect the capacity of the Li-S battery, depending on the amount and allotrope type of sulfur and its energy stored and delivered, which depends on the integrated product of potential and capacity.
Hence, the design of future cathode hosts for Li-S batteries is a complex exercise. Micropores smaller than 0.7 nm are detrimental for the Li-S battery energy, as they can only accommodate lower-order sulfides that reduce the first voltage plateau in the battery while these micropores consume electrolyte, which is sometimes a waste as the absorbed electrolyte remains passive if there is no sufficient sulfur to utilize it in redox reactions. However, these pores filled with the electrolyte offer a high-power supercapacitor component and the device is then a hybrid Li-S battery/Li-ion capacitor. Furthermore, larger micropores might be beneficial to the Li-S battery as they can accommodate S8 and restrict escape of polysulfides, reducing the “shuttling” effect during battery cycling.
The numerical model of heat transfer and sulfur infiltration outlined in this paper may also be applied to other porous cathode hosts, such as activated carbon powder [7,9,10] graphene [11,12] or other porous carbon material [6] with measured pore size distribution that can be used as input data in the simulations. The material properties and porosity would be used to determine the thermal properties (heat capacity and thermal conductivity) for the heat transfer, Equation (1). The pore size distribution of the porous host controls the sulfur impregnation in Equations (8)–(11) and the type of sulfur allotrope that may be formed in each pore size. In general, simulations of the sulfur infiltration may comprise the first stage, in a comprehensive numerical model of cathode fabrication and Li-S battery operation. Combining simulations of the composite cathode fabrication and battery cycling will help in the design of optimized porous hosts and composite cathodes.

6. Conclusions

The pore size distribution of a porous carbon host for a composite cathode is very important in a Li-S battery, both in cathode manufacture and during battery operation. A numerical model has been developed in this study for the description of the sulfur infiltration into the porous host while heated above the melting point of sulfur in cathode manufacture, taking into account the pore size distribution of the porous host and including heat transfer, sulfur sublimation, and evaporation, as well as formation of lower-order sulfur allotropes, depending on pore size and available thermal energy compared to their energy of formation. Computational simulations predicted a composite cathode with 38 and 41 wt% sulfur for set hot-plate temperatures of 200 and 175 °C, respectively, with homogeneous sulfur distribution through the ACF thickness after 2 h of infiltration. In terms of the porous carbon host, pores smaller than 0.4 nm could not accommodate any sulfur allotrope. For pores smaller than 0.7 nm, sulfur resided mainly in the form of S4 and of S6. S8 resided in micropores between 0.7 and 1.5 nm.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, C.L.; methodology, K.L., J.P.B., and C.L.; software, K.L. and C.L.; validation, K.L. and J.P.B.; formal analysis, K.L., J.P.B., and C.L.; investigation, K.L., J.P.B., and C.L.; resources, C.L.; data curation, C.L.; writing—original draft preparation, K.L. and C.L.; writing—review and editing, C.L.; visualization, K.L., J.P.B., and C.L.; supervision, C.L.; project administration, C.L. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

J.P.B. gratefully acknowledges funding from EPSRC project HiPoBat.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

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Figure 1. Cathode host: (a,b) SEM images of cathode host activated carbon fabric (ACF); (c) discretized pore size distribution (PSD) of cathode host ACF.
Figure 1. Cathode host: (a,b) SEM images of cathode host activated carbon fabric (ACF); (c) discretized pore size distribution (PSD) of cathode host ACF.
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Figure 2. Sulfur impregnation setup: (a) assembly for the sulfur impregnation into ACF cathode host; y axis for the model in Section 3; (b) an infrared photograph from the temperature-monitoring procedure.
Figure 2. Sulfur impregnation setup: (a) assembly for the sulfur impregnation into ACF cathode host; y axis for the model in Section 3; (b) an infrared photograph from the temperature-monitoring procedure.
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Figure 3. Sulfur allotropes in relation to pores in porous cathode host: (a) molecular models of sulfur allotropes, minimum dimension (Lmin) for each allotrope and formation energy (DHf) [39]; (b) possible accommodation of allotropes in different pore sizes (dp), corresponding to the peaks of the PSD in Figure 1c.
Figure 3. Sulfur allotropes in relation to pores in porous cathode host: (a) molecular models of sulfur allotropes, minimum dimension (Lmin) for each allotrope and formation energy (DHf) [39]; (b) possible accommodation of allotropes in different pore sizes (dp), corresponding to the peaks of the PSD in Figure 1c.
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Figure 4. Data fits for sulfur vapor (a) linear fit of experimental data (data table from [46]) of sulfur vapor viscosity against temperature; (b) polynomial fit of experimental data (data table from [47]) of sulfur vapor pressure against temperature.
Figure 4. Data fits for sulfur vapor (a) linear fit of experimental data (data table from [46]) of sulfur vapor viscosity against temperature; (b) polynomial fit of experimental data (data table from [47]) of sulfur vapor pressure against temperature.
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Figure 5. Predicted total mass of sulfur in ACF and top sulfur layer as a function of time and comparison with the experimental data at 40 and 120 min; error bars in the experimental data points from five repeat experiments.
Figure 5. Predicted total mass of sulfur in ACF and top sulfur layer as a function of time and comparison with the experimental data at 40 and 120 min; error bars in the experimental data points from five repeat experiments.
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Figure 6. SEM/EDX element maps of sulfur (yellow) and carbon (red) of the top surface of the ACF samples impregnated with sulfur; each set of S/C element maps is from a different sample.
Figure 6. SEM/EDX element maps of sulfur (yellow) and carbon (red) of the top surface of the ACF samples impregnated with sulfur; each set of S/C element maps is from a different sample.
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Figure 7. SEM/EDX element maps of sulfur (yellow) and carbon (red) of the cross section of the ACF samples impregnated with sulfur, where, in each image, left to right represents top-to-bottom direction in the sample; each set of S/C element maps is from a different sample.
Figure 7. SEM/EDX element maps of sulfur (yellow) and carbon (red) of the cross section of the ACF samples impregnated with sulfur, where, in each image, left to right represents top-to-bottom direction in the sample; each set of S/C element maps is from a different sample.
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Figure 8. SEM/EDX element maps of sulfur (yellow) and carbon (red) and a mixed S/C element map of the cross section of an activated carbon (AC) fiber impregnated with sulfur, from magnification of sample image of Figure 7b.
Figure 8. SEM/EDX element maps of sulfur (yellow) and carbon (red) and a mixed S/C element map of the cross section of an activated carbon (AC) fiber impregnated with sulfur, from magnification of sample image of Figure 7b.
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Figure 9. Predicted evolution of the concentration of the sulfur allotropes in different pore sizes in the ACF (near the bottom surface of ACF) as a function of time.
Figure 9. Predicted evolution of the concentration of the sulfur allotropes in different pore sizes in the ACF (near the bottom surface of ACF) as a function of time.
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Figure 10. Predicted contour plots of the concentration of different sulfur allotropes after 40 min and after 2 h of infiltration time, as a function of the pore diameter and vertical position in the sulfur-ACF composite cathode, where y = 0 at current collector and y = 0.5 mm at the top of the composite cathode.
Figure 10. Predicted contour plots of the concentration of different sulfur allotropes after 40 min and after 2 h of infiltration time, as a function of the pore diameter and vertical position in the sulfur-ACF composite cathode, where y = 0 at current collector and y = 0.5 mm at the top of the composite cathode.
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Table 1. Density and heat capacity of sulfur [40].
Table 1. Density and heat capacity of sulfur [40].
Title 1Solid S8 Orthorhombic T < 95 °CSolid S8 Monoclinic 95 °C ≤ T < 120 °CMelt Sulfur
120 °C ≤ T < 159 °C
Melt Sulfur 159 °C ≤ T
ρS (kg m−3)2070196018191819
a21.2221.22−4540.97−37.93
b3.863.8626,065.60133.24
c22.2722.27−55,520.70−95.32
d−10.32−10.3242,112.2024.01
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Lasetta, K.; Baboo, J.P.; Lekakou, C. Modeling and Simulations of the Sulfur Infiltration in Activated Carbon Fabrics during Composite Cathode Fabrication for Lithium-Sulfur Batteries. J. Compos. Sci. 2021, 5, 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs5030065

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Lasetta K, Baboo JP, Lekakou C. Modeling and Simulations of the Sulfur Infiltration in Activated Carbon Fabrics during Composite Cathode Fabrication for Lithium-Sulfur Batteries. Journal of Composites Science. 2021; 5(3):65. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs5030065

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Lasetta, Kyriakos, Joseph Paul Baboo, and Constantina Lekakou. 2021. "Modeling and Simulations of the Sulfur Infiltration in Activated Carbon Fabrics during Composite Cathode Fabrication for Lithium-Sulfur Batteries" Journal of Composites Science 5, no. 3: 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs5030065

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