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A weakly solvating electrolyte towards practical rechargeable aqueous zinc-ion batteries.

Xin ShiJinhao XieJin WangShilei XieZujin YangXiaoqing Liu
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Structure deterioration and side reaction, which originated from the solvated H 2 O, are the main constraints for the practical deployment of both cathode and anode in aqueous Zn-ion batteries. Here we formulate a weakly solvating electrolyte to reduce the solvating power of H 2 O and strengthen the coordination competitiveness of SO 4 2- to Zn 2+ over H 2 O. Experiment results and theoretical simulations demonstrate that the water-poor solvation structure of Zn 2+ is achieved, which can (i) substantially eliminate solvated-H 2 O-mediated undesirable side reactions on the Zn anode. (ii) boost the desolvation kinetics of Zn 2+ and suppress Zn dendrite growth as well as structure aberration of the cathode. Remarkably, the synergy of these two factors enables long-life full cells including Zn/NaV 3 O 8 ·1.5H 2 O, Zn/MnO 2 and Zn/CoFe(CN) 6 cells. More importantly, practical rechargeable AA-type Zn/NVO cells are assembled, which present a capacity of 101.7 mAh and stability of 96.1% capacity retention after 30 cycles at 0.66 C.
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