Molecular Bridging Induced Anti-Salting-Out Effect Enabling High Ionic Conductive ZnSO4-Based Hydrogel for Quasi-Solid-State Zinc Ion Batteries.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
; 63(44): e202410434, 2024 Oct 24.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39078870
ABSTRACT
Hydrogel electrolytes (HEs) hold great promise in tackling severe issues emerging in aqueous zinc-ion batteries, but the prevalent salting-out effect of kosmotropic salt causes low ionic conductivity and electrochemical instability. Herein, a subtle molecular bridging strategy is proposed to enhance the compatibility between PVA and ZnSO4 from the perspective of hydrogen-bonding microenvironment re-construction. By introducing urea containing both an H-bond acceptor and donor, the broken H-bonds between PVA and H2O, initiated by the SO4 2--driven H2O polarization, could be re-united via intense intermolecular hydrogen bonds, thus leading to greatly increased carrying capacity of ZnSO4. The urea-modified PVA-ZnSO4 HEs featuring a high ionic conductivity up to 31.2â
mS cm-1 successfully solves the sluggish ionic transport dilemma at the solid-solid interface. Moreover, an organic solid-electrolyte-interphase can be derived from the in situ electro-polymerization of urea to prohibit H2O-involved side reactions, thereby prominently improving the reversibility of Zn chemistry. Consequently, Zn anodes witness an impressive lifespan extension from 50â
h to 2200â
h at 0.1â
mA cm-2 while the Zn-I2 full battery maintains a remarkable Coulombic efficiency (>99.7 %) even after 8000 cycles. The anti-salting-out strategy proposed in this work provides an insightful concept for addressing the phase separation issue of functional HEs.
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01-internacional
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MEDLINE
Language:
En
Journal:
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
Year:
2024
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Article
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