Detail publikačního výsledku

Experimental study on cycle aging of 3.4 Ah lithium-sulfur pouch cells: Temperature and current investigation

CAPKOVÁ, D.; FINSTERLE, T.; RYAN, K.; KAZDA, T.; STROE, D.; KNAP, V.

Originální název

Experimental study on cycle aging of 3.4 Ah lithium-sulfur pouch cells: Temperature and current investigation

Anglický název

Experimental study on cycle aging of 3.4 Ah lithium-sulfur pouch cells: Temperature and current investigation

Druh

Článek WoS

Originální abstrakt

High energy density sulfur cathodes are among the most promising alternatives to conventional intercalation cathodes for next-generation lithium-ion batteries. However, the practical implementation of lithium-sulfur (Li-S) systems is limited by rapid capacity fade and poor cycling stability. These issues are primarily driven by the polysulfide shuttle effect, wherein soluble higher lithium polysulfides, generated at the high voltage discharge plateau, migrate between the electrodes, resulting in active material loss. In an attempt to approach the commercial application of Li-S batteries, an in-depth investigation of pouch cells under different conditions is inevitable. This study focuses on the cycle aging of pre-commercial 3.4 Ah Li-S pouch cells at different temperatures and current rates using non-destructive techniques. The most negative effect on the performance of the Li-S battery cell is a low temperature of 10 degrees C and 50 degrees C. From the perspective of different charging and discharging currents, the reduced battery lifetime was observed for fast charging at 0.2 C and 0.3 C. The internal resistance increased with the degradation of the battery cell and is more pronounced in the low voltage plateau. To maximize the cycle life of the Li-S batteries, the optimal cycling conditions are at around 30 degrees C, charging at 0.1 C and discharging at 0.2 C.

Anglický abstrakt

High energy density sulfur cathodes are among the most promising alternatives to conventional intercalation cathodes for next-generation lithium-ion batteries. However, the practical implementation of lithium-sulfur (Li-S) systems is limited by rapid capacity fade and poor cycling stability. These issues are primarily driven by the polysulfide shuttle effect, wherein soluble higher lithium polysulfides, generated at the high voltage discharge plateau, migrate between the electrodes, resulting in active material loss. In an attempt to approach the commercial application of Li-S batteries, an in-depth investigation of pouch cells under different conditions is inevitable. This study focuses on the cycle aging of pre-commercial 3.4 Ah Li-S pouch cells at different temperatures and current rates using non-destructive techniques. The most negative effect on the performance of the Li-S battery cell is a low temperature of 10 degrees C and 50 degrees C. From the perspective of different charging and discharging currents, the reduced battery lifetime was observed for fast charging at 0.2 C and 0.3 C. The internal resistance increased with the degradation of the battery cell and is more pronounced in the low voltage plateau. To maximize the cycle life of the Li-S batteries, the optimal cycling conditions are at around 30 degrees C, charging at 0.1 C and discharging at 0.2 C.

Klíčová slova

Lithium-sulfur pouch cell, Battery degradation, Cycle aging, Temperature influence, C-rate influence

Klíčová slova v angličtině

Lithium-sulfur pouch cell, Battery degradation, Cycle aging, Temperature influence, C-rate influence

Autoři

CAPKOVÁ, D.; FINSTERLE, T.; RYAN, K.; KAZDA, T.; STROE, D.; KNAP, V.

Vydáno

01.12.2025

Nakladatel

Elsevier

Periodikum

Chemical Engineering Journal

Svazek

525

Číslo

November 2025

Stát

Švýcarská konfederace

Strany počet

11

URL

BibTex

@article{BUT201307,
  author="Dominika {Capková} and  {} and  {} and Tomáš {Kazda} and  {} and  {}",
  title="Experimental study on cycle aging of 3.4 Ah lithium-sulfur pouch cells: Temperature and current investigation",
  journal="Chemical Engineering Journal",
  year="2025",
  volume="525",
  number="November 2025",
  pages="11",
  doi="10.1016/j.cej.2025.170341",
  issn="1385-8947",
  url="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1385894725111856?via%3Dihub"
}