RESUMO
Aqueous Zn-ion batteries (AZIBs) are promising for the next-generation large-scale energy storage. However, the Zn anode remains facing challenges. Here, we report a cyclodextrin polymer (P-CD) to construct quasi-single ion conductor for coating and protecting Zn anodes. The P-CD coating layer inhibited the corrosion of Zn anode and prevented the side reaction of metal anodes. More important is that the cyclodextrin units enabled the trapping of anions through host-guest interactions and hydrogen bonds, forming a quasi-single ion conductor that elevated the Zn ion transference number (from 0.31 to 0.68), suppressed the formation of space charge regions and hence stabilized the plating/striping of Zn ions. As a result, the Zn//Zn symmetric cells coated with P-CD achieved a 70.6â times improvement in cycle life at high current densities of 10â mA cm-2 with 10â mAh cm-2. Importantly, the Zn//K1.1V3O8 (KVO) full-cells with high mass loading of cathode materials and low N/P ratio of 1.46 reached the capacity retention of 94.5 % after 1000â cycles at 10â A g-1; while the cell without coating failed only after 230â cycles. These results provide novel perspective into the control of solid-electrolyte interfaces for stabilizing Zn anode and offer a practical strategy to improve AZIBs.
RESUMO
Aqueous Zn-ion batteries (AZIBs) are considered as promising candidates for the next-generation large-scale energy storage, which, however, is facing the challenge of instable Zn anodes. The anion is pivotal in the stability of anodes, which are not being paid enough attention to. Herein, the modulation of anions is reported using the Hofmeister series in supramolecular chemistry to boost the stability of Zn anodes. It is found that the right-side anions in the Hofmeister series (e.g., OTf-) can enhance the Zn2+ transference number, increase the Coulombic efficiency, facilitate uniform Zn deposition, reduce the freezing point of electrolytes, and thereby stabilize the Zn anodes. More importantly, the right-side anions can form strong interaction with ß-cyclodextrin (ß-CD) compared to the left-side anions, and hence the addition of ß-CD can further enhance the stability of Zn anodes in OTf--based electrolytes, showing enhancement of cycling lifespan in the Zn//Zn symmetric cells more than 45.5 times with ß-CD compared with those without ß-CD. On the contrary, the left-side anions show worse rate performance after the addition of ß-CD. These results provide an effective and novel approach for choosing anions and matching additives to stabilize the anodes and achieve high-performance AZIBs through the Hofmeister effect.
RESUMO
Fluoro-substitution solvents have achieved great success in electrolyte engineering for high-energy lithium metal batteries, which, however, is beset by low solvating power, thermal and chemical instability, and possible battery swelling. Instead, we herein introduce cyanogen as the electron-withdrawing group to enhance the oxidative stability of ether solvents, in which cyanogen and ether oxygen form the chelating structure with Li+ not notably undermining the solvating power. Cyano-group strongly bonds with transition metals (TMs) of NCM811 cathode to attenuate the catalytic reactivity of TMs toward bulk electrolytes. Besides, a stable and uniform cathode-electrolyte interphase (CEI) inhibits the violent oxidation decomposition of electrolytes and guarantees the structural integrity of the NCM811 cathode. Also, a N-containing and LiF-rich solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) in our electrolyte facilitates fast Li+ migration and dense Li deposition. Accordingly, our electrolyte enables a stable cycle of Li metal anode with Coulombic efficiency of 98.4% within 100 cycles. 81.8% capacity of 4.3 V NCM811 cathode remains after 200 cycles. Anode-free pouch cells with a capacity of 125 mAh maintain 76% capacity after 100 cycles, corresponding to an energy density of 397.5 Wh kg-1.
RESUMO
Organic electrode materials have attracted a lot interest in batteries in recent years. However, most of them still suffer from low performance such as low electrode potential, slow reaction kinetics, and short cycle life. In this work, we report a strategy of fabricating donor-acceptor (D-A) conjugated polymers for facilitating the charge transfer and therefore accelerating the reaction kinetics by using the copolymer (p-TTPZ) of dihydrophenazine (PZ) and thianthrene (TT) as a proof-of-concept. The D-A conjugated polymer as p-type cathode could store anions and exhibited high discharge voltages (two plateaus at 3.82â V, 3.16â V respectively), a reversible capacity of 152â mAh g-1 at 0.1â A g-1 , excellent rate performance with a high capacity of 124.2â mAh g-1 at 10â A g-1 (≈50â C) and remarkable cyclability. The performance, especially the rate capability was much higher than that of its counterpart homopolymers without D-A structure. As a result, the p-TTPZ//graphite full cells showed a high output voltage (3.26â V), a discharge specific capacity of 139.1â mAh g-1 at 0.05â A g-1 and excellent rate performance. This work provides a novel strategy for developing high performance organic electrode materials through molecular design and will pave a way towards high energy density organic batteries.
RESUMO
Organic electrode materials are promising for batteries. However, the reported organic electrodes are often facing the challenges of low specific capacity, low voltage, poor rate capability and vague charge storage mechanisms, etc. Isomers are good platform to investigate the charge storage mechanisms and enhance the performance of batteries, which, however, have not been focused in batteries. Herein, two isomers are reported for batteries. As a result, the isomer tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) could store two monovalent anions reversibly, deriving an average discharge voltage of 1.05 V and a specific capacity of 220 mAh g-1 at a current density of 2 C. On the other hand, the other isomer tetrathianaphthalene could only reversibly store one monovalent anion and upon further oxidation, it would undergo an irreversible solid-state molecular rearrangement to TTF. The molecular rearrangement was confirmed by electrochemical performances, X-ray diffraction patterns, nuclear magnetic resonance spectra, and 1H detected heteronuclear multiple bond correlation spectra. These results suggested the small structural change could lead to a big difference in anion storage, and we hope this work will stimulate more attention to the structural design for boosting the performance of organic batteries.
RESUMO
Conjugated coordination polymers (CCPs), which possess long-range planar π-d conjugation, are fascinating for various applications because they inherit the merits of both metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and conducting polymers. However, only one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) CCPs have been reported so far. The synthesis of three-dimensional (3D) CCPs is challenging and even seems theoretically infeasible because conjugation implies 1D or 2D structure. Besides, the redox activity of the conjugated ligands and the π-d conjugation makes the synthesis of CCPs very complicated, and hence, single crystals of CCPs are rarely achieved. Herein, we reported the first 3D CCP and its single crystals with atomically precise structures. The synthesis process involves complicated in situ dimerization, deprotonation of ligands, oxidation/reduction of both ligands and metal ions, and precise coordination between them. The crystals contain in-plane 1D π-d conjugated chains and close π-π interactions between the adjacent chains that are bridged by another column of stacked chains, thus forming 3D CCP with high conductivity (400 S m-1 at room temperature and 3100 S m-1 at 423 K) and potential applications as cathodes in sodium-ion batteries with high capacity, rate capability, and cyclability.
RESUMO
Redox organic electrode materials (OEMs) have attracted extensive attention for batteries due to the possibility to be designed with high performance. However, the practical application of OEMs requires rigor criteria such as low cost, recyclability, scalability and high performance etc. and hence seems still far away. Here, we demonstrate an OEM for high performance aqueous organic batteries. Quantification of the charge storage confirmed the storage of protons with fast reaction kinetics, thereby enabling the high performance at high mass loading. As a result, the laminated pouch cells delivered Ampere-hour-scale capacity with excellent cycling performance. Benefited from the small molecular nature and the stable both charged and discharged states, the electrodes can be recycled at any states of charge with high yields (more than 90 %). This work provides a substantial step in the practical applications of OEMs for the future sustainable batteries.
RESUMO
Solid-state batteries have become one of the hottest research areas today, due to the use of solid-state electrolytes enabling the high safety and energy density. Because of the interaction with electrolyte salts and the abundant ion transport sites, natural polysaccharide polymers with rich functional groups such as -OH, -OR or -COO- etc. have been applied in solid-state electrolytes and have the merits of possibly high ionic conductivity and sustainability. This review summarizes the recent progress of natural polysaccharides and derivatives for polymer electrolytes, which will stimulate further interest in the application of polysaccharides for solid-state batteries.
RESUMO
Conjugated coordination polymers (CCPs) with extended π-d conjugation, which can effectively promote long-range delocalization of electrons and enhance conductivity, are superior to traditional metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and attracted great attention for potential applications in chemical sensors, electronics, energy conversion/storage devices, etc. However, the precise construction of CCPs is still challenging due to the complex and uncontrollable reactions of CCPs. Herein, two different framework dimensions of CCPs are controllably realized by employing the same ligand (2,3,5,6-tetraaminobenzoquinone (TABQ)) and the same metal (copper) as center ions. The manipulation of reaction leads to different valences of ligands and metal ions, different coordination geometries, and thereby 1D-CuTABQ and 2D-CuTABQ frameworks, respectively. High performance of charge storage is hence achieved involving the storage of both cations and anions, and therein, 2D-CuTABQ shows a high reversible capacity of ≈305 mAh g-1 , good rate capability and high capacity retention (≈170 mAh g-1 after 2000 cycles at 5 A g-1 with 0.01% decay per cycle), which outperforms 1D-CuTABQ and almost all of the reported MOFs as cathodes for batteries. These results highlight the delicate structural control of CCPs for high-performance batteries and other various applications.
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Redox-active organic materials have shown great potential as electrodes in lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). However, most of them showed a low discharge potential. We report a thianthrene-based small molecule (BDBDT), which could be facilely synthesized, as a high-potential cathode. The BDBDT cathode exhibited good electrochemical performance with a discharge plateau at 3.9 V (vs. Li/Li+) and a discharge capacity of 63 mA h g-1 after 100 cycles at 500 mA g-1 (â¼10C). Our results demonstrate that thianthrene-based molecules are promising for the development of high-potential organic electrodes towards rechargeable batteries with high energy and power density.
RESUMO
The structural designability of organic electrode materials makes them attractive for symmetric all-organic batteries (SAOBs) by virtue of different plateaus. However, quite a few works have reported all-organic batteries and it is still challenging to develop a high-performance organic material for SAOBs. Herein, a small molecule, 2,3,7,8-tetraaminophenazine-1,4,6,9-tetraone (TAPT), is reported for SAOBs. The rich C=O and C=N groups ensure the high capacity at both plateaus for C=O/C-O and C=N/C-N redox reactions, which are hence utilized as cathodic and anodic active centers respectively. Moreover, the presence of C=O, C=N and NH2 groups resulted in plentiful strong intermolecular interactions, leading to layered structures, insolubility and high stability. The rich functional groups also facilitated the chelation of N and O with Li cations and hence benefited the storage of Li cations. The electrochemical performances of TAPT-based SAOBs outperformed all of the previously reported SAOBs.
RESUMO
Aqueous zinc-ion batteries (ZIBs) are promising for next-generation energy storage. However, the reported electrode materials for ZIBs are facing shortcomings including low capacity and unsatisfactory cycling stability etc. Herein, hexaazatrinaphthalene-quione (HATNQ) is reported for aqueous ZIBs. The HATNQ electrodes delivered an ultrahigh capacity (482.5â mAh g-1 at 0.2â A g-1 ) and outstanding cyclability of >10 000 cycles at 5â A g-1 . The capacity sets a new record for organic cathodes in aqueous ZIBs. The high performances are ascribed to the rich C=O and C=N groups that endowed HATNQ with a 2D layered supramolecular structure by multiple hydrogen bonds in plane with π-π interactions out-of-plane, leading to enhanced charge transfer, insolubility, and rapid ion transport for fast-charge and -discharge batteries. Moreover, the 2D supramolecular structure boosted the storage of Zn2+ /H+ , particularly the storage of Zn2+ , due to the more favorable Oâ â â Znâ â â N coordination in HATNQ.
RESUMO
The printed electronics technology can be used to efficiently construct smart devices and is dependent on functional inks containing well-dispersed active materials. Two-dimensional (2D) materials are promising functional ink candidates due to their superior properties. However, the majority 2D materials can disperse well only in organic solvents or in surfactant-assisted water solutions, which limits their applications. Herein, we report a lithium (Li)-ion exchange method to improve the dispersity of the Na2W4O13 nanosheets in pure water. The Li-ion-exchanged Na2W4O13 (LixNa2-xW4O13) nanosheets show highly stable dispersity in water with a zeta potential of -55 mV. Moreover, this aqueous ink can be sprayed on various substrates to obtain a uniform LixNa2-xW4O13 nanosheet film, exhibiting an excellent electrochromic performance. A complementary electrochromic device containing a LixNa2-xW4O13 nanosheet film as an electrochromic layer and Prussian white (PW) as an ion storage layer exhibits a large optical modulation of 75% at 700 nm, a fast switching response of less than 2 s, and outstanding cyclic stability. This Na2W4O13-based aqueous ink exhibits considerable potential for fabricating large-scale and flexible electrochromic devices, which would meet the practical application requirements.