RESUMO
Rechargeable aqueous Zn-ion batteries have received extensive attention due to their environmental friendliness, high safety, and low cost. However, the Zn dendrite growth during plating/stripping cycles, which deteriorates coulombic efficiency and shortens the cycle life, dramatically hinders the application of Zn anodes in batteries. Herein, we propose to grow an In layer on Zn foils through spontaneous Galvanic reaction to address the challenging Zn dendrites.In-situoptical observations show that this strategy effectively suppresses the dendrite growth, thereby leading to a robust and stable Zn metal anode with low voltage hysteresis (30 mV at 0.4 mA·cm-2) and long cycle life of over 1200 h in symmetric cells. Meanwhile, the full cell assembled with the modified Zn anode and MnO2cathode exhibits excellent cycling performance over 2000 cycles and a high discharge capacity of 89.1 mAh·g-1. This work provides an efficient pathway for interfacial engineering towards stable Zn anodes.
RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Parents play an important role in shaping youth's lifestyle behaviors. This study aimed to investigate physical activity parenting practices (PAPP) for Chinese early adolescents and compare reporting discrepancies between parents and adolescent boys and girls. METHODS: Fifty-five adolescent-parent dyads participated in 16 paired focus group interviews, and an additional 122 dyads completed questionnaire surveys with open-ended questions. Participants were recruited from 3 public middle schools in Suzhou, China. Qualitative data were analyzed inductively using an open-coding scheme. Frequencies of codes were compared by parent-child role and adolescent gender using chi-square tests. RESULTS: Eighteen types of PAPP were identified and grouped into 6 categories: goals/control, structure, parental physical activity participation, communication, support, and discipline. These PAPP were viewed as promotive, preventive, or ineffective. Participants had mixed opinions on the effects of 11 PAPP and identified parental, adolescent, and environmental barriers for parents to promote youth physical activity. Compared with parents, adolescents were more likely to value the effects of setting expectation, scheduling, and coparticipation as well as dislike pressuring, restriction, and punishment. Girls were more likely to favor coparticipation and were more sensitive about negative communication than boys. Parents paid more attention to environmental barriers, whereas adolescents, especially girls, focused more on personal issues. CONCLUSIONS: Future studies need to address both positive and negative PAPP as well as perception discrepancies by child-parent role and adolescent gender to generate more evidence to promote parents as favorable socialization agents of youth physical activity.