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Simultaneous tailoring of hydrogen evolution and dendrite growth via a fertilizer-derived additive for the stabilization of the zinc anode interface

Authors
Shaik, Mahammad RafiOlidan, Syryll MaynardKim, JihoonCho, Kuk YoungYoon, Sukeun
Issue Date
Mar-2023
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, v.11, no.12, pp 6403 - 6412
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume
11
Number
12
Start Page
6403
End Page
6412
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/112581
DOI
10.1039/d2ta09913f
ISSN
2050-7488
2050-7496
Abstract
Zinc metal anodes suffer from unavoidable issues related to their charge-discharge stability (mainly inducing uneven dendrite formation and unwanted side reactions between the electrode and electrolyte), which lead to their inferior reversibility and hinder their commercial applications. Optimizing the nucleation behavior to improve reversible Zn electrodeposition has been extensively studied, but the poor cycling reversibility and additive cost remain challenging. Herein, an additive engineering approach using fertilizer-derived N-methylthiourea was designed to regulate the Zn-electrolyte interface while avoiding these problems. This sulfur-carrying urea molecule has a strong affinity for both Zn and Zn2+, and it preferentially adsorbs on the Zn surface to delay water adsorption and controls the secondary diffusion of Zn2+ to stabilize the Zn/electrolyte interface, extending the hydrogen evolution potential to -0.92 V. It also prolongs the induction time of Zn crystal formation, leading to uniform Zn plating/stripping as well as dendrite formation suppression. Consequently, the electrochemical performance was greatly improved in the Zn|Zn symmetric cell, showing a low overvoltage (40 mV) and stable cycling performance (1000 h) at 1 mA cm(-2). Further, the Zn|V2O5-C full-cell delivered a consistent capacity over 420 cycles with a coulombic efficiency of similar to 98.6%. This study demonstrates a new strategy for metal-electrolyte interface stabilization that can be applied to practical metal-based batteries.
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ERICA 공학대학 (ERICA 배터리소재화학공학과)
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