Research Highlights

[Nature Communications] Prof. Jinbao Zhao and Assoc. Prof. Yang Yang published a paper entitled "Synergetic bifunctional Cu-In alloy interface enables Ah-level Zn metal pouch cells"

Publish Date:27.November 2024     Visted: Times       

Title: Synergetic bifunctional Cu-In alloy interface enables Ah-level Zn metal pouch cells

Authors: Minghao Zhang, Chenxi Sun, Guanhong Chen, Yuanhong Kang, Zeheng Lv, Jin Yang, Siyang Li, Pengxiang Lin, Rong Tang, Zhipeng Wen, Cheng Chao Li, Jinbao Zhao* & Yang Yang*

Abstract: Rechargeable aqueous zinc-metal batteries, considered as the possible post-lithium-ion battery technology for large-scale energy storage, face severe challenges such as dendrite growth and hydrogen evolution side reaction (HER) on Zn negative electrode. Herein, a three-dimensional Cu-In alloy interface is developed through a facile potential co-replacement route to realize uniform Zn nucleation and HER anticatalytic effect simultaneously. Both theoretical calculations and experimental results demonstrate that this bifunctional Cu-In alloy interface inherits the merits of low Zn-nucleation overpotential and high HER overpotential from individual copper and indium constituents, respectively. Moreover, the dynamical self-reconstruction during cycling leads to an HER-anticatalytic and zincophilic gradient hierarchical structure, enabling highly reversible Zn chemistry with dendrite-free Zn (002) deposition and inhibited HER. Moreover, the improved interface stability featured by negligible pH fluctuations in the diffusion layer and suppressed by-product formation is evidenced by in-situ scanning probe technology, Raman spectroscopy, and electrochemical gas chromatography. Consequently, the lifespan of the CuIn@Zn symmetric cell is extended to more than one year with a voltage hysteresis of 6 mV. Importantly, the CuIn@Zn negative electrode is also successfully coupled with high-loading iodine positive electrode to fabricate Ah-level (1.1 Ah) laminated pouch cell, which exhibits a capacity retention of 67.9% after 1700 cycles.

Full-Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-53831-z