RESUMO
Plating battery electrodes typically deliver higher specific capacity values than insertion or conversion electrodes because the ion charge carriers represent the sole electrode active mass, and a host electrode is unnecessary. However, reversible plating electrodes are rare for electronically insulating nonmetals. Now, a highly reversible iodine plating cathode is presented that operates on the redox couples of I2 /[ZnIx (OH2 )4-x ]2-x in a water-in-salt electrolyte. The iodine plating cathode with the theoretical capacity of 211â mAh g-1 plates on carbon fiber paper as the current collector, delivering a large areal capacity of 4â mAh cm-2 . Tunable femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy coupled with DFT calculations elucidate a series of [ZnIx (OH2 )4-x ]2-x superhalide ions serving as iodide vehicles in the electrolyte, which eliminates most free iodide ions, thus preventing the consequent dissolution of the cathode-plated iodine as triiodides.
RESUMO
We report reversible electrochemical insertion of NO3 - into manganese(II, III) oxide (Mn3 O4 ) as a cathode for aqueous dual-ion batteries. Characterization by TGA, FTIR, EDX, XANES, EXAFS, and EQCM collectively provides unequivocal evidence that reversible oxidative NO3 - insertion takes place inside Mn3 O4 . Ex situ HRTEM and corresponding EDX mapping results suggest that NO3 - insertion de-crystallizes the structure of Mn3 O4 . Kinetic studies reveal fast migration of NO3 - in the Mn3 O4 structure. This finding may open a new direction for novel low-cost aqueous dual-ion batteries.
RESUMO
This study reveals the transport behavior of lattice water during proton (de)insertion in the structure of the hexagonal WO3·0.6H2O electrode. By monitoring the mass evolution of this electrode material via electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance, we discovered (1) WO3·0.6H2O incorporates additional lattice water when immersing in the electrolyte at open circuit voltage and during initial cycling; (2) The reductive proton insertion in the WO3 hydrate is a three-tier process, where in the first stage 0.25 H+ is inserted per formula unit of WO3 while simultaneously 0.25 lattice water is expelled; then in the second stage 0.30 naked H+ is inserted, followed by the third stage with 0.17 H3O+ inserted per formula unit. Ex situ XRD reveals that protonation of the WO3 hydrate causes consecutive anisotropic structural changes: it first contracts along the c-axis but later expands along the ab planes. Furthermore, WO3·0.6H2O exhibits impressive cycle life over 20â¯000 cycles, together with appreciable capacity and promising rate performance.
RESUMO
Aqueous rechargeable batteries are promising solutions for large-scale energy storage. Such batteries have the merit of low cost, innate safety, and environmental friendliness. To date, most known aqueous ion batteries employ metal cation charge carriers. Here, we report the first "rocking-chair" NH4 -ion battery of the full-cell configuration by employing an ammonium Prussian white analogue, (NH4 )1.47 Ni[Fe(CN)6 ]0.88 , as the cathode, an organic solid, 3,4,9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic diimide (PTCDI), as the anode, and 1.0 m aqueous (NH4 )2 SO4 as the electrolyte. This novel aqueous ammonium-ion battery demonstrates encouraging electrochemical performance: an average operation voltage of ca. 1.0â V, an attractive energy density of ca. 43 Wh kg-1 based on both electrodes' active mass, and excellent cycle life over 1000 cycles with 67 % capacity retention. Importantly, the topochemistry results of NH4+ in these electrodes point to a new paradigm of NH4+ -based energy storage.
RESUMO
Iron ion batteries using Fe2+ as a charge carrier have yet to be widely explored, and they lack high-performing Fe2+ hosting cathode materials to couple with the iron metal anode. Here, it is demonstrated that VOPO4 â2H2 O can reversibly host Fe2+ with a high specific capacity of 100 mAh g-1 and stable cycling performance, where 68% of the initial capacity is retained over 800 cycles. In sharp contrast, VOPO4 â2H2 O's capacity of hosting Zn2+ fades precipitously over tens of cycles. VOPO4 â2H2 O stores Fe2+ with a unique mechanism, where upon contacting the electrolyte by the VOPO4 â2H2 O electrode, Fe2+ ions from the electrolyte get oxidized to Fe3+ ions that are inserted and trapped in the VOPO4 â2H2 O structure in an electroless redox reaction. The trapped Fe3+ ions, thus, bolt the layered structure of VOPO4 â2H2 O, which prevents it from dissolution into the electrolyte during (de)insertion of Fe2+ . The findings offer a new strategy to use a redox-active ion charge carrier to stabilize the layered electrode materials.