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Aqueous zinc batteries (AZBs) have recently garnered considerable interest due to their potential cost benefit and safety. Use of an abundant and high-capacity zinc metal anode and inexpensive and safe aqueous electrolytes make them suitable for large-scale energy storage applications. However, the sluggish solid-state diffusion of divalent zinc puts stringent requirements on the choice of inorganic host structures. Organic solids, which are presumably sustainable, offer unique versatility, as they possess a soft lattice for facile ionic diffusion and diverse redox functions. Here, we tap into that prospect with a novel organic cathode, namely, 1,4 bis(diphenylamino)benzene (BDB), which delivers nearly a 2-electron redox capacity of 125 mA h g–1, at an average voltage of 1.25 V in an AZB. The two tertiary nitrogens reversibly oxidize/reduce in two steps, with accompanying anion insertion/release from/into a highly concentrated aqueous electrolyte possessing a high oxidative stability. Reversible plating/stripping of zinc on the anode side complements the anion (de)insertion on the cathode side, yielding a rechargeable dual-ion system. Paired with a cellulose nanocrystal membrane to suppress the active material diffusion into the electrolyte, the BDB cathode delivers 112 mA h g–1 of capacity with 82% retention after 500 cycles at a 3C rate (1C = 130 mA g–1), and 1000 cycles with 75% capacity retention at a 6C rate, at nearly 100% Coulombic efficiency. Reversible electrochemistry is accompanied by two reversible biphasic transformations and reversible chemical evolution between BDB, BDB+, and BDB2+ species, as made evident by operando X-ray diffraction and solid-state operando ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy studies. These results highlight a new avenue and understanding of organic cathode hosts development for AZBs.
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Hadrien Glatz
ETH Zurich
Erlantz Lizundia
University of the Basque Country
Fiona Pacifico
ETH Zurich
ACS Applied Energy Materials
ETH Zurich
University of the Basque Country
Basque Center for Materials, Applications and Nanostructures
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Glatz et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1c9893f63f086470a18fa6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsaem.8b01851
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