Summary Herein, hollow N-doped carbon polyhedrons with hierarchical pores were fabricated by etching ZIF-8 crystals and were first used as the host of sulfur for lithium-sulfur batteries. This host possesses… Click to show full abstract
Summary Herein, hollow N-doped carbon polyhedrons with hierarchical pores were fabricated by etching ZIF-8 crystals and were first used as the host of sulfur for lithium-sulfur batteries. This host possesses both micropores and mesopores, and inner wide cavities, which enable the sulfur to effectively immerse into the polyhedrons without obstacles and simultaneously restrict the escaping of polysulfides by outer carbon shell and abundant N sites. Hence, the polyhedron host combines the physical confinement and chemical interaction for polysulfides by virtue of the unique architecture. As a result, the hierarchically porous polyhedron enables a sulfur content of 72 wt% and achieves a faster polysulfide trapping and better electrochemical performance than the ZIF-8-derived microporous host at the sulfur loading of 1 and 5 mg cm−2.
               
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