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An Overview on Anodes for Magnesium Batteries: Challenges towards a Promising Storage Solution for Renewables

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano11030810

Keywords

magnesium battery; anode; Sn-Bi alloy; post-Li battery; Mg metal

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Magnesium-based batteries have gained attention due to their high theoretical volumetric capacity, abundance, and dendrite-free behavior. However, the formation of insulating passivation layers with Mg deposition and dissolution in polar organic electrolytes presents a challenge that requires specific strategies to overcome.
Magnesium-based batteries represent one of the successfully emerging electrochemical energy storage chemistries, mainly due to the high theoretical volumetric capacity of metallic magnesium (i.e., 3833 mAh cm(-3) vs. 2046 mAh cm(-3) for lithium), its low reduction potential (-2.37 V vs. SHE), abundance in the Earth's crust (10(4) times higher than that of lithium) and dendrite-free behaviour when used as an anode during cycling. However, Mg deposition and dissolution processes in polar organic electrolytes lead to the formation of a passivation film bearing an insulating effect towards Mg2+ ions. Several strategies to overcome this drawback have been recently proposed, keeping as a main goal that of reducing the formation of such passivation layers and improving the magnesium-related kinetics. This manuscript offers a literature analysis on this topic, starting with a rapid overview on magnesium batteries as a feasible strategy for storing electricity coming from renewables, and then addressing the most relevant outcomes in the field of anodic materials (i.e., metallic magnesium, bismuth-, titanium- and tin-based electrodes, biphasic alloys, nanostructured metal oxides, boron clusters, graphene-based electrodes, etc.).

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