Journal
ADVANCED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/aenm.202302495
Keywords
aqueous batteries; calcium ion batteries; covalent organic framework; organic anode materials
Ask authors/readers for more resources
This study utilizes a covalent organic framework as the anode material for aqueous calcium-ion batteries, showing an ultralow potential plateau, exceptional rate performance, prolonged cycling, and maintained capacity. This research holds significance in advancing organic anodes to achieve higher battery voltages and mitigate the limitations of calcium-ion batteries.
Rechargeable aqueous calcium-ion batteries (CIBs) are promising for reliable large-scale energy storage. However, they face significant challenges, primarily stemming from suboptimal anodes, resulting in unfavorable voltage profiles, limited capacity, and diminished durability, all of which hinder the development of CIBs. Here, a covalent organic framework (PTHAT-COF) featuring repeated pyrazine and pyridinamine units, employed as the anode material for aqueous CIBs, is introduced. This innovative approach results in a remarkably flat ultralow potential plateau ranging from -0.6 to -1.05 V (vs Ag/AgCl), attributed to the high level of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital. Furthermore, the PTHAT-COF anode exhibits outstanding rate performance (152.3 mAh g-1 @ 1 A g-1), exceptional long-term cycling stability, and remarkable capacity retention (10 000 cycles with 89.9% retention). Mechanistic studies, including experimental and theoretical calculations, reveal that CN active sites reversibly trap Ca2+ ions via chemisorption during the discharging/charging process. The PTHAT-COF demonstrates exceptional structural stability throughout cycling. Finally, by pairing PTHAT-COF with a high-voltage manganese-based Prussian blue cathode, a complete aqueous CIB with a voltage interval of 2.2 V is achieved, exhibiting extraordinary durability (10 000 cycles with 83.6% retention). This research illuminates the potential of organic anode materials in aqueous batteries to achieve higher battery voltages. Rechargeable aqueous calcium-ion batteries (CIBs), promising candidates for dependable large-scale energy storage systems, face challenges like irreversible anodes, inadequate voltage, low capacity, and limited durability. Here, a covalent organic framework (PTHAT-COF) is used as an anode for aqueous CIB, showcasing an ultralow potential plateau, exceptional rate performance, prolonged cycling, and maintained capacity. This study holds significance in advancing organic anodes to attain higher cell voltages and mitigate CIB limitations.image
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available