Abstract
Aqueous calcium ion batteries, promising for energy storage, are still challenged by very limited anode choices. Although a Zn metal anode is popular in aqueous batteries, interface instability due to incessant corrosion and severe Zn dendrites hinders its development. Here, an interphase layer with densely packed nanocrystals of Ca3(CO3)2(OH)2·1.5H2O and ZnF2, and amorphous organic species, is demonstrated for a Zn metal anode with 1 M calcium trifluoromethyl sulfonate aqueous electrolyte. The hybrid interface fully avoids direct Zn-H2O contact, maintains fast ion conductivity, and effectively prevents corrosion and dendrite growth. Therefore, the symmetric cell stably lasts for 1600 h at 0.5 mA cm-2 and 2.5 mAh cm-2, far superior to 150 h for the control cell. Furthermore, the device maintains 80% capacity retention after 700 cycles at 1 A g-1, outperforming 13% retention after 200 cycles for the control device. This work indicates that interface and interphase engineering is also crucial for aqueous batteries.
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