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Research Article

Production and purification of anhydrous sodium sulfide

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Pages 426-442 | Received 26 Dec 2020, Accepted 18 Mar 2021, Published online: 31 Mar 2021
 

Abstract

Anhydrous sodium sulfide (Na2S) is a key component in sodium-sulfur batteries as well as an important chemical reagent. However, anhydrous Na2S is currently prohibitively expensive for applications outside of research labs, and purity is a concern. Herein, we compare the properties of three forms of anhydrous Na2S: (i) commercially supplied, (ii) Na2S produced through dehydration and purification of commercial hydrate flakes (Na2S•xH2O), and (iii) Na2S formed by the reaction of hydrogen sulfide with dissolved sodium alkoxide and recovered through solvent evaporation. Vacuum annealing of low-cost Na2S hydrate at 150°C produced anhydrous Na2S. This dehydrated material retains impurity signatures attributed to polysulfide (Na2Sx) and oxysulfur impurities (SOx) that were also observed in commercially supplied Na2S. Impurity removal typically requires hydrogen reduction at very high temperature (700–900°C), but it is demonstrated here that this can instead be accomplished at 400°C, preventing auto-oxidation and following kinetics well-described by a shrinking core model. The solution-based approach resulted in the direct synthesis of crystalline Na2S anhydride at low temperatures (100°C) without need for further purification. Both approaches presented herein are inherently scalable with materials costs that are one to two orders of magnitude lower than the current price of anhydrous Na2S.

GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation through Award 1825470 and the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Supporting Information

Spectroscopic peak assignments, additional SEM images – including lower magnifications and milled Na2S hydrate – lab-scale reagent cost summary, and shrinking-core reaction model details.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation through Award 1825470 and the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade.

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