Deeply Rechargeable
and Hydrogen-Evolution-Suppressing
Zinc Anode in Alkaline Aqueous Electrolyte
Posted on 2020-05-29 - 18:05
Metallic
zinc as a rechargeable anode material for aqueous batteries
has gained tremendous attention. Zn-air batteries, which operate in
alkaline electrolytes, are promising with the highest theoretical
volumetric energy density. However, rechargeable zinc anodes develop
slowly in alkaline electrolytes due to passivation, dissolution, and
hydrogen evolution issues. In this study, we report the design of
a submicron zinc anode sealed with an ion-sieving coating that suppresses
hydrogen evolution reaction. The design is demonstrated with ZnO nanorods
coated by TiO2, which overcomes passivation, dissolution,
and hydrogen evolution issues simultaneously. It achieves superior
reversible deep cycling performance with a high discharge capacity
of 616 mAh/g and Coulombic efficiency of 93.5% when cycled with 100%
depth of discharge at lean electrolyte. It can also deeply cycle ∼350
times in a beaker cell. The design principle of this work may potentially
be applied to other battery electrode materials.
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Zhang, Yamin; Wu, Yutong; You, Wenqin; Tian, Mengkun; Huang, Po-Wei; Zhang, Yifan; et al. (2020). Deeply Rechargeable
and Hydrogen-Evolution-Suppressing
Zinc Anode in Alkaline Aqueous Electrolyte. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01776