posted on 2017-10-18, 00:00authored byAna Robba, Alen Vizintin, Jan Bitenc, Gregor Mali, Iztok Arčon, Matjaž Kavčič, Matjaž Žitnik, Klemen Bučar, Giuliana Aquilanti, Charlotte Martineau-Corcos, Anna Randon-Vitanova, Robert Dominko
Magnesium–sulfur
batteries are considered as attractive
energy-storage devices due to the abundance of electrochemically active
materials and high theoretical energy density. Here we report the
mechanism of a Mg–S battery operation, which was studied in
the presence of simple and commercially available salts dissolved
in a mixture of glymes. The electrolyte offers high sulfur conversion
into MgS in the first discharge with low polarization. The electrochemical
conversion of sulfur with magnesium proceeds through two well-defined
plateaus, which correspond to the equilibrium between sulfur and polysulfides
(high-voltage plateau) and polysulfides and MgS (low-voltage plateau).
As shown by XANES, RIXS (resonant inelastic X-ray scattering), and
NMR studies, the end discharge phase involves MgS with Mg atoms in
a tetrahedral environment resembling the wurtzite structure, while
chemically synthesized MgS crystallizes in the rock-salt structure
with octahedral coordination of magnesium.