Il s'agit d'un magasin de démonstration. Aucune commande ne sera honorée.

Dynamic Locking of Interfacial Side Reaction Sites Promotes Aluminum-Air Batteries Close to Theoretical Capacity

Advanced Sustainable Systems [2021]
Yuanlin Huang, Lei Fang, Yu Gu, Pingshi Wang, Hao Yan, Yanjie Wang, Zexing Cao, Zhaowu Tian, Bingwei Mao, Li Zhang
ABSTRACT

Aluminum metal has been regarded as a promising anode material for aqueous metal-air batteries. However, the stable cycling of Al anodes is challenging due to the severe parasitic corrosion of Al metal in alkaline electrolytes. Here, a novel additive, n -octylphosphonic acid (OPA), is introduced into the typical NaOH electrolyte system to improve the interfacial stability of Al anodes and thus promote high-performance Al-air batteries (AABs). Combining several experimental characterizations and theoretical calculation, it is proved that OPA molecules in an NaOH aqueous environment can modify the Al anode/electrolyte interface and alter the stacking of the discharge product. The electrolyte engineering is capable of anchoring dynamically to restrain side reactions through hydrogen bonds (H···O), homogenizing the dissolution of Al metal and avoiding precipitation agglomeration. As a proof of concept, AABs full cells with an electrolyte containing OPA achieve higher potential plateau and discharge capacity than those with a pure NaOH electrolyte. It paves a way to develop highly-efficient and eco-friendly electrolyte additive strategies for high-performance AABs devices and advance the current understanding of organic additive mechanisms in AABs.

MATERIALS

Shall we send you a message when we have discounts available?

Remind me later

Thank you! Please check your email inbox to confirm.

Oops! Notifications are disabled.