Molecular‐Crowding Effect Mimicking Cold‐Resistant Plants to Stabilize the Zinc Anode with Wider Service Temperature Range

Huaizheng Ren(Harbin Institute of Technology), Sai Li(Harbin Institute of Technology), Bo Wang(Harbin Institute of Technology), Yanyan Zhang(Soochow University), Tian Wang(Fudan University), Qiang Lv(Harbin Institute of Technology), Xiangyu Zhang(Tianjin University), Lei Wang(Harbin Institute of Technology), Xiao Han(Beijing University of Technology), Fan Jin(Harbin Institute of Technology), Changyuan Bao(Harbin Institute of Technology), Pengfei Yan(Beijing University of Technology), Nan Zhang(Harbin Institute of Technology), Dianlong Wang(Harbin Institute of Technology), Tao Cheng(Soochow University), Huan Liu(University of Shanghai for Science and Technology), Shi Xue Dou(University of Shanghai for Science and Technology)
Advanced Materials
October 14, 2022
Cited by 269Open Access

Abstract

Abstract Growth of dendrites, the low plating/stripping efficiency of Zn anodes, and the high freezing point of aqueous electrolytes hinder the practical application of aqueous Zn‐ion batteries. Here, a zwitterionic osmolyte‐based molecular crowding electrolyte is presented, by adding betaine (Bet, a by‐product from beet plant) to the aqueous electrolyte, to solve the abovementioned problems. Substantive verification tests, density functional theory calculations, and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations consistently reveal that side reactions and growth of Zn dendrites are restrained because Bet can break Zn 2+ solvation and regulate oriented 2D Zn 2+ deposition. The Bet/ZnSO 4 electrolyte enables superior reversibility in a Zn–Cu half‐cell to achieve a high Coulombic efficiency >99.9% for 900 cycles (≈1800 h), and dendrite‐free Zn plating/stripping in Zn–Zn cells for 4235 h at 0.5 mA cm −2 and 0.5 mAh cm −2 . Furthermore, a high concentration of Bet lowers the freezing point of the electrolyte to −92 °C via the molecular‐crowding effect, which ensures the stable operation of the aqueous batteries at −30 °C. This innovative concept of such a molecular crowding electrolyte will inject new vitality into the development of multifunctional aqueous electrolytes.


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