Antifreezing Hydrogel with High Zinc Reversibility for Flexible and Durable Aqueous Batteries by Cooperative Hydrated Cations

2019 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Antifreezing Hydrogel with High Zinc Reversibility for Flexible and Durable Aqueous Batteries by Cooperative Hydrated Cations​
Zhu, M.; Wang, X.; Tang, H.; Wang, J.; Hao, Q.; Liu, L. & Li, Y. et al.​ (2019) 
Advanced Functional Materials30(6) art. 1907218​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201907218 

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Authors
Zhu, Minshen; Wang, Xiaojie; Tang, Hongmei; Wang, Jiawei; Hao, Qi; Liu, Lixiang; Li, Yang; Zhang, Kai ; Schmidt, Oliver G.
Abstract
Hydrogels are widely used in flexible aqueous batteries due to their liquid‐like ion transportation abilities and solid‐like mechanical properties. Their potential applications in flexible and wearable electronics introduce a fundamental challenge: how to lower the freezing point of hydrogels to preserve these merits without sacrificing hydrogels' basic advantages in low cost and high safety. Moreover, zinc as an ideal anode in aqueous batteries suffers from low reversibility because of the formation of insulative byproducts, which is mainly caused by hydrogen evolution via extensive hydration of zinc ions. This, in principle, requires the suppression of hydration, which induces an undesirable increase in the freezing point of hydrogels. Here, it is demonstrated that cooperatively hydrated cations, zinc and lithium ions in hydrogels, are very effective in addressing the above challenges. This simple but unique hydrogel not only enables a 98% capacity retention upon cooling down to −20 °C from room temperature but also allows a near 100% capacity retention with >99.5% Coulombic efficiency over 500 cycles at −20 °C. In addition, the strengthened mechanical properties of the hydrogel under subzero temperatures result in excellent durability under various harsh deformations after the freezing process.
Issue Date
2019
Journal
Advanced Functional Materials 
Organization
Fakultät für Forstwissenschaften und Waldökologie ; Burckhardt-Institut ; Abteilung Holztechnologie und Holzwerkstoffe ; Juniorprofessur Holztechnologie und Holzchemie 
ISSN
1616-301X
eISSN
1616-3028
Language
English

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