4.8 Article

Complete Prevention of Dendrite Formation in Zn Metal Anodes by Means of Pulsed Charging Protocols

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 22, Pages 18691-18698

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b01705

Keywords

Zinc; dendrites; batteries; electrodeposition; high-throughput approach

Funding

  1. Helmholtz Association through the Initiative and Networking Fund in the Helmholtz Energie Allianz Stationare elektrochemische Feststoffspeicher und -wandler [HA-E-0002]
  2. International Max-Planck Research School for Surface and Interface Engineering in Advanced Materials (IMPRS-SurMat)

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Zn metal as anode in rechargeable batteries, such as Zn/air or Zn/Ni, suffers from poor cyclability. The formation of Zn dendrites upon cycling is the key limiting step. We report a systematic study of the influence of pulsed electroplating protocols on the formation of Zn dendrites and in turn on strategies to completely prevent Zn dendrite formation. Because of the large number of variables in electroplating protocols, a scanning droplet cell technique was adapted as a high-throughput methodology in which a descriptor of the surface roughness can be in situ derived by means of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. Upon optimizing the electroplating protocol by controlling nucleation, zincate ion depletion, and zincate ion diffusion, scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy confirmed the growth of uniform and homogenous Zn deposits with a complete prevention of dendrite growth. The implementation of pulsed electroplating as the charging protocol for commercially available Ni-Zn batteries leads to substantially prolonged cyclability demonstrating the benefits of pulsed charging in Zn metal-based batteries.

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