Prioritizing Hetero-Metallic Interfaces via Thermodynamics Inertia and Kinetics Zincophilia Metrics for Tough Zn-Based Aqueous Batteries.
Ruizheng ZhaoXusheng DongPei LiangHongpeng LiTengsheng ZhangWanhai ZhouBoya WangZhoudong YangXia WangLipeng WangZhihao SunFanxing BuZaiwang ZhaoWei LiDongyuan ZhaoDongliang ChaoPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2023)
Poor thermodynamic stability and sluggish electrochemical kinetics of metallic Zn anode in aqueous solution greatly hamper its practical application. To solve such problems, to date, various zincophilic surface modification strategies are developed, which can facilitate reversible Zn plating/stripping behavior. However, there is still a lack of systematic and fundamental understanding regarding the metrics of thermodynamics inertia and kinetics zincophilia in selecting zincophilic sites. Herein, hetero-metallic interfaces are prioritized for the first time via optimizing different hetero metals (Fe, Co, Ni, Sn, Bi, Cu, Zn, etc.) and synthetic solvents (ethanol, ethylene glycol, n-propanol, etc.). Specifically, both theoretical simulations and experimental results suggest that this Bi@Zn interface can exhibit high efficiency owing to the thermodynamics inertia and kinetics zincophilia. A best practice for prioritizing zincophilic sites in a more practical metric is also proposed. As a proof of concept, the Bi@Zn anode delivers ultralow overpotential of ≈55 mV at a high rate of 10 mA cm -2 and stable cycle life over 4700 cycles. The elaborated "thermodynamics inertia and kinetics metalphilia" metrics for hetero-metallic interfaces can benchmark the success of other metal-based batteries.