Synergy of In Situ Heterogeneous Interphases with Hydrogen Bond Reconstruction Enabling Highly Reversible Zn Anode at −40 °C

Anbin Zhou, Huirong Wang, Xin Hu, Zhengqiang Hu, Yi Zhao, Botao Zhang, Yongxin Huang*, Yanhua Cui, Yixiu Cui, Li Li, Feng Wu, Renjie Chen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Aqueous Zn2+ ion batteries (AZIBs) are considered promising candidates for large-scale energy storage systems. However, the critical technical bottlenecks, including Zn dendrite, corrosion reactions, and poor low-temperature performance, significantly impede their commercialization. Here, γ-valerolactone (γ-GVL), a bioactive polar biomass-based green solvent derived from lignocellulose, is introduced into electrolyte as a co-solvent to improve the electrochemical stability of Zn anode and enhance its low-temperature cycling performance. The non-toxic γ-GVL, serving as a strong hydrogen-bonding ligand, coordinates with H2O to reconstruct the electrolyte's hydrogen bond network, broadening the electrochemical stability window and enhancing the anti-frost properties of aqueous electrolytes. Moreover, γ-GVL facilitates in situ formation of a heterogeneous solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) composed of ZnF2 and ZnS inorganic components. The heterogeneous interphases maintain superior ionic conductivity for Zn2+ transportation and hydrophobicity for H2O repulsion, synergistically enabling highly stable and dendrite-free Zn deposition. Consequently, Zn||Zn cells exhibit improved cycling performance across a wide temperature range, achieving an extended cycle life of 5060 h at 25 °C and 2300 h at −40 °C. Zn||VO2 full cells show enhanced low-temperature cyclability, retaining 97.0% capacity after 300 cycles at −20 °C, demonstrating substantial potential for advancing the commercialization of low-temperature aqueous electrolytes.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

Keywords

  • heterogeneous interphases
  • hydrogen bond reconstruction
  • low-temperature
  • Zn anode

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