4.8 Article

A Patternable and In Situ Formed Polymeric Zinc Blanket for a Reversible Zinc Anode in a Skin-Mountable Microbattery

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202007497

Keywords

microbatteries; patternable polymers; wearables; Zn anodes; Zn-ion coordination

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council (CSC)
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11904153]
  3. German Research Foundation SPP 1857 ESSENCE [KA5051/1-1]
  4. Leibniz Program of the German Research Foundation [SCHM 1298/26-1]

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The study presents a technique using a polyimide coating to solve the capacity loss issue of zinc anodes in an acid electrolyte. The polyimide coordinates with zinc ions to build a zinc blanket, reducing the concentration gradient at the electrode/electrolyte interface for fast kinetics and low plating/stripping overpotential.
Owing to their high safety and reversibility, aqueous microbatteries using zinc anodes and an acid electrolyte have emerged as promising candidates for wearable electronics. However, a critical limitation that prevents implementing zinc chemistry at the microscale lies in its spontaneous corrosion in an acidic electrolyte that causes a capacity loss of 40% after a ten-hour rest. Widespread anti-corrosion techniques, such as polymer coating, often retard the kinetics of zinc plating/stripping and lack spatial control at the microscale. Here, a polyimide coating that resolves this dilemma is reported. The coating prevents corrosion and hence reduces the capacity loss of a standby microbattery to 10%. The coordination of carbonyl oxygen in the polyimide with zinc ions builds up over cycling, creating a zinc blanket that minimizes the concentration gradient through the electrode/electrolyte interface and thus allows for fast kinetics and low plating/stripping overpotential. The polyimide's patternable feature energizes microbatteries in both aqueous and hydrogel electrolytes, delivering a supercapacitor-level rate performance and 400 stable cycles in the hydrogel electrolyte. Moreover, the microbattery is able to be attached to human skin and offers strong resistance to deformations, splashing, and external shock. The skin-mountable microbattery demonstrates an excellent combination of anti-corrosion, reversibility, and durability in wearables.

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