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1.
Small Methods ; : e2400070, 2024 Apr 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38639028

ABSTRACT

H+ co-intercalation chemistry of the cathode is perceived to have damaging consequences on the low-rate and long-term cycling of aqueous zinc batteries, which is a critical hindrance to their promise for stationary storage applications. Herein, the thermodynamically competitive H+ storage chemistry of an attractive high-voltage cathode LiMn2O4 is revealed by employing operando and ex-situ analytical techniques together with density functional theory-based calculations. The H+ electrochemistry leads to the previously unforeseen voltage decay with cycling, impacting the available energy density, particularly at lower currents. Based on an in-depth investigation of the effect of the Li+ to Zn2+ ratio in the electrolyte on the charge storage mechanism, a purely aqueous and low-salt concentration electrolyte with a tuned Li+/Zn2+ ratio is introduced to subdue the H+-mediated charge storage kinetically, resulting in a stable voltage output and improved cycling stability at both low and high cathode loadings. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction analysis reveals that repeated H+ intercalation triggers an irreversible phase transformation leading to voltage decay, which is averted by shutting down H+ storage. These findings unveiling the origin and impact of the deleterious H+-storage, coupled with the practical strategy for its inhibition, will inspire further work toward this under-explored realm of aqueous battery chemistry.

2.
Adv Mater ; 36(9): e2309212, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38041711

ABSTRACT

The essential virtues of aqueous zinc battery chemistry stem from the energy-dense zinc metal anode and mild aqueous electrolytes. Yet, their incompatibility - as exposed by zinc's corrosion and associated dendrite problem - poses a challenge to achieving improved cycle life under practically relevant parameters. While electrolyte additives are a scalable strategy, additives that can function at low volume concentrations remain elusive. Here, through screening alkanol and alkanediol chemistries, 1,2-butanediol and pentanediol are unveiled as highly potent additives, which operate at a practical 1 volume% concentration owing to their ability to furnish dynamic solid-electrolyte interphase through pronounced interfacial filming. This unique mechanistic action renders effective corrosion and dendrite mitigation, resulting in up to five to twenty-fold zinc cyclability enhancement with a high Coulombic efficiency (up to 99.9%) and improved full-cell performance under demanding conditions, including at elevated temperatures. A machine learning-based analysis is presented to rationalize the additive performance relative to critical physicochemical descriptors, which can pave the way for a rational approach to efficient additive discoveries.

3.
Small ; 19(50): e2206639, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36737816

ABSTRACT

Solid polymer electrolytes (SPEs) offer several advantages compared to their liquid counterparts, and much research has focused on developing SPEs with enhanced mechanical properties while maintaining high ionic conductivities. The recently developed polymerization-induced microphase separation (PIMS) technique offers a straightforward pathway to fabricate bicontinuous nanostructured materials in which the mechanical properties and conductivity can be independently tuned. In this work SPEs with tunable mechanical properties and conductivities are prepared via digital light processing 3D printing, exploiting the PIMS process to achieve nanostructured ion-conducting materials for energy storage applications. A rigid crosslinked poly(isobornyl acrylate-stat-trimethylpropane triacrylate) scaffold provided materials with room temperature shear modulus above 400 MPa, while soft poly(oligoethylene glycol methyl ether acrylate) domains containing the ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium bis-(trifluoromethyl sulfonyl)imide endowed the material with ionic conductivity up to 1.2 mS cm-1 at 30 °C. These features make the 3D-printed SPE very competitive for applications in all solid energy storage devices, including supercapacitors.

4.
Small ; 19(7): e2206249, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36436829

ABSTRACT

Transient batteries are expected to lessen the inherent environmental impact of traditional batteries that rely on toxic and critical raw materials. This work presents the bottom-up design of a fully transient Zn-ion battery (ZIB) made of nontoxic and earth-abundant elements, including a novel hydrogel electrolyte prepared by cross-linking agarose and carboxymethyl cellulose. Facilitated by a high ionic conductivity and a high positive zinc-ion species transference number, the optimized hydrogel electrolyte enables stable cycling of the Zn anode with a lifespan extending over 8500 h for 0.25 mA cm-2 - 0.25 mAh cm-2 . On pairing with a biocompatible organic polydopamine-based cathode, the full cell ZIB delivers a capacity of 196 mAh g-1 after 1000 cycles at a current density of 0.5 A g-1 and a capacity of 110 mAh g-1 after 10 000 cycles at a current density of 1 A g-1 . A transient ZIB with a biodegradable agarose casing displays an open circuit voltage of 1.123 V and provides a specific capacity of 157 mAh g-1 after 200 cycles at a current density of 50 mA g-1 . After completing its service life, the battery can disintegrate under composting conditions.

5.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 9: 971321, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36148060

ABSTRACT

Background: CXCL12/CXCR4 signaling is essential in cardiac development and repair, however, its contribution to aortic valve stenosis (AVS) remains unclear. In this study, we tested the role of endothelial CXCR4 on the development of AVS. Materials and methods: We generated CXCR4 endothelial cell-specific knockout mice (EC CXCR4 KO) by crossing CXCR4fl/fl mice with Tie2-Cre mice to study the role of endothelial cell CXCR4 in AVS. CXCR4fl/fl mice were used as controls. Echocardiography was used to assess the aortic valve and cardiac function. Heart samples containing the aortic valve were stained using Alizarin Red for detection of calcification. Masson's trichrome staining was used for the detection of fibrosis. The apex of the heart samples was stained with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) to visualize ventricular hypertrophy. Results: Compared with the control group, the deletion of CXCR4 in endothelial cells led to significantly increased aortic valve peak velocity and aortic valve peak pressure gradient, with decreased aortic valve area and ejection fraction. EC CXCR4 KO mice also developed cardiac hypertrophy as evidenced by increased diastolic and systolic left ventricle posterior wall thickness (LVPW), cardiac myocyte size, and heart weight (HW) to body weight (BW) ratio. Our data also confirmed increased microcalcifications, interstitial fibrosis, and thickened valvular leaflets of the EC CXCR4 KO mice. Conclusion: The data collected throughout this study suggest the deletion of CXCR4 in endothelial cells is linked to the development of aortic valve stenosis and left ventricular hypertrophy. The statistically significant parameters measured indicate that endothelial cell CXCR4 plays an important role in aortic valve development and function. We have compiled compelling evidence that EC CXCR4 KO mice can be used as a novel model for AVS.

6.
Adv Mater ; 34(42): e2204816, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36007199

ABSTRACT

The development of advanced solid-state energy-storage devices is contingent upon finding new ways to produce and manufacture scalable, high-modulus solid-state electrolytes that can simultaneously provide high ionic conductivity and robust mechanical integrity. In this work, an efficient one-step process to manufacture solid polymer electrolytes composed of nanoscale ion-conducting channels embedded in a rigid crosslinked polymer matrix via Digital Light Processing 3D printing is reported. A visible-light-mediated polymerization-induced microphase-separation approach is utilized, which produces materials with two chemically independent nanoscale domains with highly tunable nanoarchitectures. By producing materials containing a poly(ethylene oxide) domain swelled with an ionic liquid, robust solid polymer electrolytes with outstanding room-temperature (22 °C) shear modulus (G' > 108 Pa) and ionic conductivities up to σ = 3 × 10-4 S cm-1 are achieved. The nanostructured 3D-printed electrolytes are fabricated into a custom geometry and employed in a symmetric carbon supercapacitor, demonstrating the scalability of the fabrication and the functionality of the electrolyte. Critically, these high-performance materials are manufactured on demand using inexpensive and commercially available 3D printers, which allows the facile modular design of solid polymer electrolytes with custom geometries.

7.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(3): 3522-3530, 2020 Jan 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31887018

ABSTRACT

The cost benefit and inherent safety conferred by the energy-dense metallic zinc anode and mildly acidic aqueous electrolytes are critical to aqueous zinc batteries' (AZBs) large-scale energy-storage ambition. Aggressive research efforts in the past five years have resulted in the discovery of several high-energy positive (cathode) host materials, but understanding of the Zn anode rechargeability and any influence of the electrolyte, which are critical for AZBs' practical development, remains limited. As we unravel here, under realistic test conditions, when parameters are set keeping practical applications in mind, Zn anode cycling appears vulnerable to dendritic failure in all common AZB electrolytes. While 3 M ZnSO4 delivers the best overall performance for the Zn anode cycling, viability of the oxidatively stable "water in salt" electrolyte appears gravely restricted. Defying the general understanding of metal electrodeposition, a high current density is found to dramatically prolong the Zn cycling lifetime, achieving >8000 cycles at 20 mA cm-2 for 1 mAh cm-2 capacity in 3 M ZnSO4. High current also allows prolonged cycling at capacities of 2 and 4 mAh cm-2. Such a striking improvement in lifetime on going from low to high currents is further confirmed through Zn|Zn0.25V2O5 and Zn|LiMn2O4 full-cell studies with practical electrode loading. Not surprisingly, all the parameters influence the cycled Zn morphology, which in turn dictates the propensity for short-circuit. These findings not only divulge previously unanticipated insight into the Zn anode cycling and electrolyte performance in AZBs but also offer a rational basis to gauge their practical development.

8.
ACS Omega ; 4(2): 2684-2692, 2019 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31459504

ABSTRACT

Innovative design concepts can play a key role in the realization of high-performance ionomer membranes that are capable of exclusive metal ion conduction and potentially applicable in electrochemical devices including sensors, fuel cells, and high-energy batteries. Herein, we report on the development of new ionomers, based on sulfonated poly(ether ether ketone) (SPEEK), engineered to conduct a variety of ions, namely, Li+, Na+, K+, Zn2+, and Mg2+, when soaked with nonaqueous solvents. Application of a facile phase-inversion method results in M-SPEEK (M = Li/Na/K/Zn/Mg) membranes with a hierarchical porous network, facilitating organic solvent infusion that is necessary to promote dissociation and rapid transport of cations between anionic sulfonate groups on the polymer chains. This strategy leads to membranes with alkali ion conductivities approaching 10-4 S cm-1 at room temperature, and near unity cation transference numbers (t M+ ≥ 0.9). Furthermore, an exceptionally high Zn-ion conductivity of 10-2 S cm-1 is obtained for the water-infused Zn-SPEEK membrane. In comparison, the dense membranes demonstrate 2-3 orders of magnitude lower conductivities because of insufficient solvent infusion. Preliminary electrochemical studies with solvent-infused ionomer membranes as the electrolyte look promising.

9.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(1): 674-682, 2019 Jan 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30521309

ABSTRACT

Aqueous Zn-ion batteries, which are being proposed as large-scale energy storage solutions because of their unparalleled safety and cost advantage, are composed of a positive host (cathode) material, a metallic zinc anode, and a mildly acidic aqueous electrolyte (pH ≈ 3-7). Typically, the charge storage mechanism is believed to be reversible Zn2+ (de)intercalation in the cathode host, with the exception of α-MnO2, for which multiple vastly different and contradicting mechanisms have been proposed. However, our present study, combining electrochemical, operando X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy in conjunction with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, and in situ pH evolution analyses on two oxide hosts-tunneled α-MnO2 and layered V3O7·H2O vis-à-vis two nonoxide hosts-layered VS2 and tunneled Zn3[Fe(CN)6]2, suggests that oxides and nonoxides follow two dissimilar charge storage mechanisms. While the oxides behave as dominant proton intercalation materials, the nonoxides undergo exclusive zinc intercalation. Stabilization of H+ on the hydroxyl-terminated oxide surface is revealed to facilitate the proton intercalation by a preliminary molecular dynamics simulation study. Proton intercalation for both oxides leads to the precipitation of layered double hydroxide (LDH)-Zn4SO4(OH)6·5H2O with a ZnSO4/H2O electrolyte and a triflate anion (CF3SO3-)-based LDH with a Zn(SO3CF3)2/H2O electrolyte-on the electrode surface. The LDH precipitation buffers the pH of the electrolytes to a mildly acidic value, sustaining the proton intercalation to deliver large specific capacities for the oxides. Moreover, we also show that the stability of the LDH precipitate is crucial for the rechargeability of the oxide cathodes, revealing a critical link between the charge storage mechanism and the performance of the oxide hosts in aqueous zinc batteries.

10.
ChemSusChem ; 9(14): 1795-803, 2016 07 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27265118

ABSTRACT

Although Na-O2 batteries have a low overpotential and good capacity retention, degradation reactions of glyme-based electrolytes are the primary reason for inefficiency in cell performance. The discharge capacity is accounted for through analysis of the side-products. Although sodium superoxide is the primary product (90 % theoretical), quantitative and qualitative evaluation of the side-products (using (1) H NMR, iodometric titration, and on-line mass spectrometry) shows the presence of sodium acetate (∼3.5 %), and three-fold less sodium formate, methoxy (oxo)acetic anhydride, and sodium carbonate. Our reaction mechanism proposes two paths for their formation. Because the side-products are not fully removed during oxidation, they accumulate on the cathode upon cycling. Resting the cell at open circuit potential during discharge results in consumption of the superoxide through the reaction with diglyme, which greatly increases the fraction of side products, as also confirmed by ex situ reaction studies. These findings have implications in the search for more stable electrolytes.


Subject(s)
Electric Power Supplies , Glycols/chemistry , Oxygen/chemistry , Sodium/chemistry , Electrodes , Ethers/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Photoelectron Spectroscopy , Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , X-Ray Diffraction
11.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 6(12): 2252-8, 2015 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26266600

ABSTRACT

The development of nonaqueous Li-oxygen batteries, which relies on the reversible reaction of Li + O2 to give lithium peroxide (Li2O2), is challenged by several factors, not the least being the high charging voltage that results when carbon is typically employed as the cathode host. We report here on the remarkably low 3.2 V potential for Li2O2 oxidation on a passivated nanostructured metallic carbide (Mo2C), carbon-free cathode host. Online mass spectrometry coupled with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy unequivocally demonstrates that lithium peroxide is simultaneously oxidized together with the Li(x)MoO3-passivated conductive interface formed on the carbide, owing to their close redox potentials. The process rejuvenates the surface on each cycle upon electrochemical charge by releasing Li(x)MoO3 into the electrolyte, explaining the low charging potential.

12.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(11): 3431-48, 2015 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25653194

ABSTRACT

Energy storage technology has received significant attention for portable electronic devices, electric vehicle propulsion, bulk electricity storage at power stations, and load leveling of renewable sources, such as solar energy and wind power. Lithium ion batteries have dominated most of the first two applications. For the last two cases, however, moving beyond lithium batteries to the element that lies below-sodium-is a sensible step that offers sustainability and cost-effectiveness. This requires an evaluation of the science underpinning these devices, including the discovery of new materials, their electrochemistry, and an increased understanding of ion mobility based on computational methods. The Review considers some of the current scientific issues underpinning sodium ion batteries.

13.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 51(12): 2308-11, 2015 Feb 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25562067

ABSTRACT

A versatile, cost-effective electrochemical analysis strategy is described that determines the specific S(n)(2-) adsorptivity of materials, and allows prediction of the long-term performance of sulphur composite electrodes in Li-S cells. Measurement of nine different materials with varying surface area, and hydrophobicity using this protocol determined optimum properties for capacity stabilization.

14.
ACS Cent Sci ; 1(9): 510-5, 2015 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27163015

ABSTRACT

Owing to its high theoretical specific energy, the Li-oxygen battery is one of the fundamentally most promising energy storage systems, but also one of the most challenging. Poor rechargeability, involving the oxidation of insoluble and insulating lithium peroxide (Li2O2), has remained the "Achilles' heel" of this electrochemical energy storage system. We report here on a new redox mediator tris[4-(diethylamino)phenyl]amine (TDPA), that-at 3.1 V-exhibits the lowest and closest potential redox couple compared to the equilibrium voltage of the Li-oxygen cell of those reported to date, with a second couple also at a low potential of 3.5 V. We show it is a soluble "catalyst" capable of lowering the Li2O2 charging potential by >0.8 V without requiring direct electrical contact of the peroxide and that it also facilitates high discharge capacities. Its chemical and electrochemical stability, fast diffusion kinetics, and two dynamic redox potentials represent a significant advance in oxygen-evolution catalysis. It enables Li-O2 cells that can be recharged more than 100 cycles with average round-trip efficiencies >80%, opening a new avenue for practical Li-oxygen batteries.

15.
Nat Commun ; 5: 4759, 2014 Aug 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25154399

ABSTRACT

The lithium-sulphur battery relies on the reversible conversion between sulphur and Li2S and is highly appealing for energy storage owing to its low cost and high energy density. Porous carbons are typically used as sulfur hosts, but they do not adsorb the hydrophilic polysulphide intermediates or adhere well to Li2S, resulting in pronounced capacity fading. Here we report a different strategy based on an inherently polar, high surface area metallic oxide cathode host and show that it mitigates polysulphide dissolution by forming an excellent interface with Li2S. Complementary physical and electrochemical probes demonstrate strong polysulphide/Li2S binding with this 'sulphiphilic' host and provide experimental evidence for surface-mediated redox chemistry. In a lithium-sulphur cell, Ti4O7/S cathodes provide a discharge capacity of 1,070 mAh g(-1) at intermediate rates and a doubling in capacity retention with respect to a typical conductive carbon electrode, at practical sulphur mass fractions up to 70 wt%. Stable cycling performance is demonstrated at high rates over 500 cycles.

16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 132(1): 20-1, 2010 Jan 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20000755

ABSTRACT

Creating nanoscale heterostructures with molecular-scale (<2 nm) metal wires is critical for many applications and remains a challenge. Here, we report the first time synthesis of nanoscale heterostructures with single-crystal molecular-scale Au nanowires attached to different nanostructure substrates. Our method involves the formation of Au nanoparticle seeds by the reduction of rocksalt AuCl nanocubes heterogeneously nucleated on the substrates and subsequent nanowire growth by oriented attachment of Au nanoparticles from the solution phase. Nanoscale heterostructures fabricated by such site-specific nucleation and growth are attractive for many applications including nanoelectronic device wiring, catalysis, and sensing.

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