Sulfur electrochemistry and metal-sulfur batteries
Research Seminar Series
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Date
02 Jan 2026
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Organiser
Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, PolyU
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Time
10:00 - 11:30
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Venue
BC302
Speaker
Prof. Quanquan Pang
Remarks
If you have enquiries regarding E-certificate after the seminar, please contact david.kuo@polyu.edu.hk.
Summary
Lithium–sulfur batteries promise high energy density storage but show poor stabilities owing to uncontrolled polysulfide dissolution. Although limiting polysulfide solvation to establish quasi-solid-state sulfur reaction can decouple electrode reactions from the electrolyte volume, this approach suffers from slow reaction kinetics. Here I will present our work on a surface-localized polysulfide-solvation strategy to mediate the reaction of ‘quasi-solid’ polysulfide by leveraging an organic phase mediator with a weakly solvating electrolyte. This electrolyte restricts polysulfide dissolution globally while the phase mediator complexes with the surface polysulfide, promoting polysulfide solvation at the surface and facilitating fast surface-localized solution-phase sulfur reactions. Furthermore, with promises for high specific energy, high safety and low cost, the all-solid-state lithium–sulfur battery (ASSLSB) is ideal for next-generation energy storage. However, the poor rate performance and short cycle life caused by the sluggish solid–solid sulfur redox reaction (SSSRR) at the three-phase boundaries remain to be solved. I will also discuss our work on a fast SSSRR enabled by lithium thioborophosphate iodide (LBPSI) glass-phase solid electrolytes (GSEs). On the basis of the reversible redox between I− and I2/I3−, the solid electrolyte (SE)—as well as serving as a superionic conductor—functions as a surficial redox mediator that facilitates the sluggish reactions at the solid–solid two-phase boundaries, thereby substantially increasing the density of active sites.
Keynote Speaker
Prof. Quanquan Pang
Assistant Professor
Materials Science and Engineering, Peking University, China
Dr. Quanquan Pang is an assistant professor in the School of Materials Science and Engineering at Peking University. He received his Bachelor and Ph.D. degrees from HUST and University of Waterloo (advisor: Linda F. Nazar), respectively with his Ph.D. thesis focusing on Li-S batteries. He worked as a postdoc at MIT (advisor: Donald R. Sadoway) before joining Peking University at 2020. He is among the highly cited researchers certified by Clarivate. He is mainly interested in studying new battery systems, solid state batteries and sulfur batteries for electrochemical energy storage and electric vehicles. He published over 40 journal papers focusing on new electrolyte and electrodes materials for advanced rechargeable batteries, including Nature, Nature Energy, Joule, PNAS and other journals. He is the recipient of Alibaba Damo Fellowship and a chief young scientist of MOST key R&D programs.
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