| Literature DB >> 32453958 |
Yamin Zhang1, Yutong Wu1, Wenqin You1, Mengkun Tian2, Po-Wei Huang1, Yifan Zhang3, Zhijian Sun4, Yao Ma1, Tianqi Hao1, Nian Liu1.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Keywords: Zinc; aqueous electrolyte; battery; hydrogen evolution
Year: 2020 PMID: 32453958 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189