4.8 Article

An ultrafast rechargeable aluminium-ion battery

Journal

NATURE
Volume 520, Issue 7547, Pages 325-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature14340

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Bureau of Energy, Ministry of Economic Affairs, Taiwan
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21303046]
  3. China Scholarship Council [201308430178]
  4. Hunan University Fund for Multidisciplinary Developing [531107040762]
  5. US Department of Energy for novel carbon materials development and electrical characterization work [DOE DE-SC0008684]
  6. Stanford GCEP
  7. Precourt Institute of Energy
  8. Global Networking Talent 3.0 plan from the Ministry of Education of Taiwan [NTUST 104DI005]
  9. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0008684] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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The development of new rechargeable battery systems could fuel various energy applications, from personal electronics to grid storage(1,2). Rechargeable aluminium-based batteries offer the possibilities of low cost and low flammability, together with three-electron-redox properties leading to high capacity'. However, research efforts over the past 30 years have encountered numerous problems, such as cathode material disintegration'', low cell discharge voltage (about 0.55 volts; ref. 5), capacitive behaviour without discharge voltage plateaus (1.1-0.2 volts(6) or 1.8-0.8 volts(7)) and insufficient cycle life (less than 100 cycles) with rapid capacity decay (by 26-85 per cent over 100 cydes)(4-7). Here we present a rechargeable aluminium battery with high-rate capability that uses an aluminium metal anode and a three-dimensional graphitic-foam cathode. The battery operates through the electrochemical deposition and dissolution of aluminium at the anode, and intercalation/de-intercalation of chloroaluminate anions in the graphite, using a non-flammable ionic liquid electrolyte. The cell exhibits well-defined discharge voltage plateaus near 2 volts, a specific capacity of about 70 mA h g(-1) and a Coulombic efficiency of approximately 98 per cent. The cathode was found to enable fast anion diffusion and intercalation, affording charging times of around one minute with a current density of similar to 4,000 mA g(-1) (equivalent to similar to 3,000 W kg(-1)) and to withstand more than 7,500 cycles without capacity decay.

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