4.8 Article

Aqueous Aluminum Cells: Mechanisms of Aluminum Anode Reactions and Role of the Artificial Solid Electrolyte Interphase

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 31, Pages 37091-37101

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c08782

Keywords

aluminum batteries; aqueous electrolyte; corrosion reaction; hydrogen evolution reaction; solid electrolyte interphase; manganese dioxide

Funding

  1. Qingdao Scientific and Technological Innovation High-Level Talents Project-Aluminum-Ion Power and Energy Storage Battery [17-2-1-1-zhc]
  2. Taishan Scholar Project of the Shandong Province of China [tsqn20161025]

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This study reveals the reaction mechanism at the Al anode of aqueous electrolyte Al cells and investigates the effects of ASEI on their charge/discharge cycling stability and activity, demonstrating the importance of chloride anions in inducing aluminum corrosion.
Electrochemical cells with aluminum (Al) as the active material offer the benefits of high energy density, low cost, and high safety. Although several research groups have assembled rechargeable Al//MxOy ( M = Mn, V, etc) cells with 2 m aqueous Al trifluoromethanesulfonate as an electrolyte and demonstrated the importance of the artificial solid electrolyte interphase (ASEI) on the Al anode for realizing high rechargeable capacity, the reactions of the Al anode in such cells remain underexplored. Herein, we investigate the effects of the ASEI on the charge/discharge cycling stability and activity of Al cells with the abovementioned aqueous electrolyte and reveal that this interphase provides chloride anions to induce the corrosion of Al rather than to support the transportation of Al3+ ions during charge/discharge. Regardless of the ASEI presence/absence, the main reactions at the Al anode during charge/discharge cycling are identified as oxidation and gas evolution, which suggests that the reduction of Al in the employed electrolyte is irreversible. The simple introduction of chloride anions (e.g., 0.15 m NaCl) into the electrolyte is shown to allow the realization of an Al//MnO2 cell with superior performance (discharge working voltage approximate to 1.5 V and specific capacity = 250 mA h/g). Thus, the present work unveils the mechanisms of reactions occurring at the Al anode of aqueous electrolyte Al cells to support their further development.

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