4.8 Article

Rigorous assessment of electrochemical rechargeability of alkaline Zn-air batteries

Journal

JOURNAL OF POWER SOURCES
Volume 543, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2022.231844

Keywords

Zn-air batteries; Electrochemical rechargeability; Polarization testing; Depth of discharge; In -situ monitoring; Electrolyte changes

Funding

  1. Anhui Provincial Natural Science Foundation [2008085ME155]
  2. National Innovative Talents Program [GG2090007001]
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Program [KJ2090130001]
  4. USTC Startup Program [KY2090000044]
  5. USTC Tang Scholar [KY2090000065]

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This study presents a rigorous assessment of the electrochemical rechargeability of Zn-air batteries (ZABs), focusing on the evaluation of polarization testing, cycling stability tests, and differential electrochemical mass spectrometry. The results demonstrate that stable voltage profiles may mask critical information indicating effective charging, and electrolyte changes may be overlooked. These findings provide important guidelines for realizing the electrochemical rechargeability of air-based batteries, including ZABs.
Zn-air batteries (ZABs) are experiencing a resurgence of attention due to competitive energy density and inherent safety. Multiple recent reports suggest that optimized bifunctional catalysts resolve the century-old challenge of ZABs and enable electrochemical rechargeability, but it is still difficult to ponder and scale-up. Herein, a rigorous assessment of electrochemical rechargeability masked by stable voltage profiles is presented. First, polarization testing as an essential technique for rapidly benchmarking the electrochemical performance of ZABs is evaluated. Then, the cycling stability tests at different depth of discharge (DOD) show that the Zn depletion rate per cycle increases significantly with increasing DOD, reaching 10% at a DOD of 50%. Further, differential electrochemical mass spectrometry is introduced for in-situ monitoring oxygen released during charging. Stable voltage profiles may miss critical information indicating effective charging, especially with transition metal oxides as catalysts and cycling using small DOD, the cycling process may involve only valence conversion of transition metals rather than oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Finally, electrolyte changes masked by the stable voltage profile are investigated. Hopefully, this work provides useful guidelines for realizing the electrochemical rechargeability of air-based batteries including ZABs.

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