Back to Search Start Over

Water‐in‐Polymer Salt Electrolyte for Long‐Life Rechargeable Aqueous Zinc‐Lignin Battery.

Authors :
Kumar, Divyaratan
Franco, Leandro R.
Abdou, Nicole
Shu, Rui
Martinelli, Anna
Araujo, C. Moyses
Gladisch, Johannes
Gueskine, Viktor
Crispin, Reverant
Khan, Ziyauddin
Source :
Energy & Environmental Materials; Jan2025, Vol. 8 Issue 1, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Zinc metal batteries (ZnBs) are poised as the next‐generation energy storage solution, complementing lithium‐ion batteries, thanks to their cost‐effectiveness and safety advantages. These benefits originate from the abundance of zinc and its compatibility with non‐flammable aqueous electrolytes. However, the inherent instability of zinc in aqueous environments, manifested through hydrogen evolution reactions (HER) and dendritic growth, has hindered commercialization due to poor cycling stability. Enter potassium polyacrylate (PAAK)‐based water‐in‐polymer salt electrolyte (WiPSE), a novel variant of water‐in‐salt electrolytes (WiSE), designed to mitigate side reactions associated with water redox processes, thereby enhancing the cyclic stability of ZnBs. In this study, WiPSE was employed in ZnBs featuring lignin and carbon composites as cathode materials. Our research highlights the crucial function of acrylate groups from WiPSE in stabilizing the ionic flux on the surface of the Zn electrode. This stabilization promotes the parallel deposition of Zn along the (002) plane, resulting in a significant reduction in dendritic growth. Notably, our sustainable Zn‐lignin battery showcases remarkable cyclic stability, retaining 80% of its initial capacity after 8000 cycles at a high current rate (1 A g−1) and maintaining over 75% capacity retention up to 2000 cycles at a low current rate (0.2 A g−1). This study showcases the practical application of WiPSE for the development of low‐cost, dendrite‐free, and scalable ZnBs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25750356
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Energy & Environmental Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181984412
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/eem2.12752