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A High‐Voltage, Dendrite‐Free, and Durable Zn–Graphite Battery
Author(s) -
Wang Gang,
Kohn Benjamin,
Scheler Ulrich,
Wang Faxing,
Oswald Steffen,
Löffler Markus,
Tan Deming,
Zhang Panpan,
Zhang Jian,
Feng Xinliang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.201905681
Subject(s) - faraday efficiency , materials science , electrolyte , anode , cathode , battery (electricity) , graphite , electrochemistry , plating (geology) , chemical engineering , dendrite (mathematics) , electrode , composite material , electrical engineering , chemistry , power (physics) , physics , geometry , mathematics , quantum mechanics , geophysics , geology , engineering
The intrinsic advantages of metallic Zn, like high theoretical capacity (820 mAh g −1 ), high abundance, low toxicity, and high safety have driven the recent booming development of rechargeable Zn batteries. However, the lack of high‐voltage electrolyte and cathode materials restricts the cell voltage mostly to below 2 V. Moreover, dendrite formation and the poor rechargeability of the Zn anode hinder the long‐term operation of Zn batteries. Here a high‐voltage and durable Zn–graphite battery, which is enabled by a LiPF 6 ‐containing hybrid electrolyte, is reported. The presence of LiPF 6 efficiently suppresses the anodic oxidation of Zn electrolyte and leads to a super‐wide electrochemical stability window of 4 V (vs Zn/Zn 2+ ). Both dendrite‐free Zn plating/stripping and reversible dual‐anion intercalation into the graphite cathode are realized in the hybrid electrolyte. The resultant Zn–graphite battery performs stably at a high voltage of 2.8 V with a record midpoint discharge voltage of 2.2 V. After 2000 cycles at a high charge–discharge rate, high capacity retention of 97.5% is achieved with ≈100% Coulombic efficiency.
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