Ion‐Sieving Carbon Nanoshells for Deeply Rechargeable Zn‐Based Aqueous Batteries

Yutong Wu(Georgia Institute of Technology), Yamin Zhang(Georgia Institute of Technology), Yao Ma(Georgia Institute of Technology), Joshua D. Howe(Texas Tech University), Haochen Yang(Georgia Institute of Technology), Peng Chen(Georgia Institute of Technology), Sireesha Aluri(Georgia Institute of Technology), Nian Liu(Georgia Institute of Technology)
Advanced Energy Materials
October 30, 2018
Cited by 195Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract As an alternative to lithium‐ion batteries, Zn‐based aqueous batteries feature nonflammable electrolytes, high theoretical energy density, and abundant materials. However, a deeply rechargeable Zn anode in lean electrolyte configuration is still lacking. Different from the solid‐to‐solid reaction mechanism in lithium‐ion batteries, Zn anodes in alkaline electrolytes go through a solid‐solute‐solid mechanism (Zn‐Zn(OH) 4 2− ‐ZnO), which introduces two problems. First, discharge product ZnO on the surface prevents further reaction of Zn underneath, which leads to low utilization of active material and poor rechargeability. Second, soluble intermediates change Zn anode morphology over cycling. In this work, an ion‐sieving carbon nanoshell coated ZnO nanoparticle anode is reported, synthesized in a scalable way with controllable shell thickness, to solve the problems of passivation and dissolution simultaneously. The nanosized ZnO prevents passivation, while microporous carbon shell slows down Zn species dissolution. Under extremely harsh testing conditions (closed cell, lean electrolyte, no ZnO saturation), this Zn anode shows significantly improved performance compared to Zn foil and bare ZnO nanoparticles. The deeply rechargeable Zn anode reported is an important step toward practical high‐energy rechargeable aqueous batteries (e.g., Zn‐air batteries). And the ion‐sieving nanoshell concept demonstrated is potentially beneficial to other electrodes such as sulfur cathode for Li‐S batteries.


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