TY - JOUR
T1 - Antifreeze Protein Mimics Realizing Stable Low-Temperature-Resistant Aqueous Zn-Ion Batteries with High Water Content
AU - Zhu, Zeyu
AU - Ma, Haoran
AU - Du, Hongzhong
AU - Zhang, Leining
AU - Wu, Jiahui
AU - Gao, Chong
AU - Li, Wei
AU - Chen, Xiaofei
AU - Su, Yaqiong
AU - Wang, Dan
AU - Chen, Xiaoting
AU - He, Zhiyuan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Rechargeable aqueous metal batteries offer inherent safety and low cost due to the predominance of water in their aqueous electrolytes, yet their practical applications are severely limited by electrolyte freezing under subzero conditions. Drawing inspiration from the mechanism of antifreeze proteins (AFPs) that protect living organisms from freezing damage, we synthesize oxidized quasi-carbon nitride quantum dots (OQCNs) featuring a regularly in-plane structure commensurate with the prism face of hexagonal ice crystal. At an ultralow concentration, the as-synthetic OQCNs effectively mimic AFP functionalities by controlling ice crystal morphology, suppressing ice growth kinetics, and inhibiting ice recrystallization. This synergistic mechanism preserves continuous ion transport pathways while mitigating physical damage to battery components caused by ice crystal growth. Molecular dynamics simulations demonstrate that the Gibbs–Thomson effect underpins the suppression of ice growth, avoiding complete solidification of the electrolyte under subzero conditions. The OQCNs-modified electrolyte exhibits exceptional cryogenic performance at −30 °C, with Zn||Zn symmetric cell maintaining stable cycling of 1000 h and Zn||NH4+-intercalated vanadium oxide (NVO) battery preserving 91.48% capacity retention through 5000 cycles (over 90 days). This work unveils a bioinspired paradigm that significantly enhances the performance of eco-friendly, high-moisture electrolytes, paving the way for robust, low-temperature-resistant zinc-ion batteries and related aqueous electrolyte-based technologies.
AB - Rechargeable aqueous metal batteries offer inherent safety and low cost due to the predominance of water in their aqueous electrolytes, yet their practical applications are severely limited by electrolyte freezing under subzero conditions. Drawing inspiration from the mechanism of antifreeze proteins (AFPs) that protect living organisms from freezing damage, we synthesize oxidized quasi-carbon nitride quantum dots (OQCNs) featuring a regularly in-plane structure commensurate with the prism face of hexagonal ice crystal. At an ultralow concentration, the as-synthetic OQCNs effectively mimic AFP functionalities by controlling ice crystal morphology, suppressing ice growth kinetics, and inhibiting ice recrystallization. This synergistic mechanism preserves continuous ion transport pathways while mitigating physical damage to battery components caused by ice crystal growth. Molecular dynamics simulations demonstrate that the Gibbs–Thomson effect underpins the suppression of ice growth, avoiding complete solidification of the electrolyte under subzero conditions. The OQCNs-modified electrolyte exhibits exceptional cryogenic performance at −30 °C, with Zn||Zn symmetric cell maintaining stable cycling of 1000 h and Zn||NH4+-intercalated vanadium oxide (NVO) battery preserving 91.48% capacity retention through 5000 cycles (over 90 days). This work unveils a bioinspired paradigm that significantly enhances the performance of eco-friendly, high-moisture electrolytes, paving the way for robust, low-temperature-resistant zinc-ion batteries and related aqueous electrolyte-based technologies.
KW - Antifreeze proteins mimic
KW - Aqueous zinc-ion batteries
KW - High water content
KW - Ice crystal inhibition
KW - Low temperature
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105002296976&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/anie.202505325
DO - 10.1002/anie.202505325
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105002296976
SN - 1433-7851
JO - Angewandte Chemie - International Edition
JF - Angewandte Chemie - International Edition
ER -