Regulated Ion/Electron-Conducting Interphase Enables Stable Zinc-Metal Anodes for Aqueous Zinc-Ions Batteries

Jiahui Zhou, Yang Mei, Feng Wu, Yutong Hao, Wenwen Ma, Li Li, Man Xie*, Renjie Chen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

52 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Metallic Zinc (Zn) is considered as a remarkably promising anode for aqueous Zn-ion batteries due to its high volumetric capacity and low redox potential. Unfortunately, dendritic growth and severe side reactions destabilizes the electrode/electrolyte interface, and ultimately reduce the electrochemical performance. Here, an artificial protective layer (APL) with a regulated ion and electron-conducting interphase is constructed on the Zn-metal anode to provide excellent interfacial stability in high-rate cycling. The superior ionic and moderate electronic conductivity of the APL derives from the co-embedding of MXene and Zn(CF3SO3)2 salts into the polyvinyl alcohol hydrogel, which enables a synergistic effect of local current density reduction during plating and ion transport acceleration during stripping for Zn anode. Furthermore, the high Young's modulus of the protective layer and dendrite-free deposition morphology during cycling suppresses hydrogen evolution reactions (2.5 mmol h−1 cm−2) and passivation. As a result, in symmetrical cell tests, the modified battery presents a stable life of over 2000 cycles at ultra-high current density of 20 mA cm−2. This research presents a new insight into the formation and regulation of stable electrode-electrolyte interface for the Zn-metal anode.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202304454
JournalAngewandte Chemie - International Edition
Volume62
Issue number29
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Conductor Interphase
  • Dendrite
  • High Performance
  • Side Reaction
  • Zinc-Metal Anode

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