4.8 Article

Ultrafast Aqueous Potassium-Ion Batteries Cathode for Stable Intermittent Grid-Scale Energy Storage

Journal

ADVANCED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 8, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/aenm.201801413

Keywords

aqueous potassium-ion batteries; grid-scale energy storage; mesoporous; Prussian blue analogues; ultrafast

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP160103107, FT170100224]

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The inherent short-term transience of solar and wind sources cause significant challenges for the electricity grid. Energy storage systems that can simultaneously provide high power, long cycle life, and high energy efficiency are required to accommodate the fast-changing output fluctuations. Here, an ultrafast aqueous K-ion battery based on the potassium-rich mesoporous nickel ferrocyanide (II) (K2NiFe(CN)(6)center dot 1.2H(2)O) is developed. This battery achieves an unprecedented rate capability up to 500 C (8214 W kg(-1)), which only takes 4.1 s for one charge or discharge. The open-framework structure of K2NiFe(CN)(6)center dot 1.2H(2)O with small volume variation supports the capacity retention of 98.6% after 5000 cycles, and a superior round-trip energy efficiency of 95.6% at a 5 C rate. Beyond monovalent ion storage, K2NiFe(CN)(6)center dot 1.2H(2)O can also function as a versatile high-rate cathode for divalent-ion batteries (Mg2+), trivalent-ion batteries (Al3+), and hybrid full-cells applications. These properties represent a significant step forward in the exploitation of ultrafast metal ions storage, and accelerate the development of intermittent grid-scale energy storage technologies.

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