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Dynamically Ion‐Coordinated Bipolar Organodichalcogenide Cathodes Enabling High‐Energy and Durable Aqueous Zn Batteries.

Authors :
Yan, Jianping
Wang, Bo
Tang, Yongchao
Du, Wencheng
Ye, Minghui
Zhang, Yufei
Wen, Zhipeng
Liu, Xiaoqing
Li, Cheng Chao
Source :
Angewandte Chemie. 4/8/2024, Vol. 136 Issue 15, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Bipolar organic cathode materials (OCMs) implementing cation/anion storage mechanisms are promising for high‐energy aqueous Zn batteries (AZBs). However, conventional organic functional group active sites in OCMs usually fail to sufficiently unlock the high‐voltage/capacity merits. Herein, we initially report dynamically ion‐coordinated bipolar OCMs as cathodes with chalcogen active sites to solve this issue. Unlike conventional organic functional groups, chalcogens bonded with conjugated group undergo multielectron‐involved positive‐valence oxidation and negative‐valence reduction, affording higher redox potentials and reversible capacities. With phenyl diselenide (PhSe‐SePh, PDSe) as a proof of concept, it exhibits a conversion pathway from (PhSe)− to (PhSe‐SePh)0 and then to (PhSe)+ as unveiled by characterization and theoretical simulation, where the diselenide bonds are periodically broken and healed, dynamically coordinating with ions (Zn2+ and OTF−). When confined into ordered mesoporous carbon (CMK‐3), the dissolution of PDSe intermediates is greatly inhibited to obtain an ultralong lifespan without voltage/capacity compromise. The PDSe/CMK‐3 || Zn batteries display high reversibility capacity (621.4 mAh gPDSe−1), distinct discharge plateau (up to 1.4 V), high energy density (578.3 Wh kgPDSe−1), and ultralong lifespan (12 000 cycles) at 10 A g−1, far outperforming conventional bipolar OCMs. This work sheds new light on conversion‐type active site engineering for high‐voltage/capacity bipolar OCMs towards high‐energy AZBs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00448249
Volume :
136
Issue :
15
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Angewandte Chemie
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176353134
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ange.202400121