Abstract

Aqueous zinc battery (AZB) is one of the most promising energy storage systems for large-scale applications due to its high safety, low cost, and environmental friendliness. To match the high capacity of zinc metal (~820 mAh g-1), various cathode materials, such as oxides, open structure analogues, chalcogens, and halogens, have been explored for AZBs. Among them, manganese dioxide (MnO2) has been considered to be one of the most attractive candidates due to its high capacity (~308 mAh g-1 for one-electron transfer) and adequate redox potential (~0.70 V vs. SHE). Recently, the MnO2 dissolution/deposition charge storage mechanism has been demonstrated to further increase the voltage and capacity of Mn-based AZBs. The dissolution/deposition (Mn2+/MnO2) is a two-electron transfer process, which doubles the theoretical capacity of MnO2 cathode to ~616 mAh g-1 and considerably increases the redox potential (~1.229 V vs. SHE). The charge storage via the dissolution/deposition mechanism pushes the aqueous-based energy density even higher, to over 1000 Wh kg-1.However, this charge storage mechanism involves liquid-solid transition, as well as the thermodynamics and kinetics of this reaction are highly dependent on the acidity and interfacial environment. Yet, the opposite effect of interfacial H+ on the dissolution/deposition processes and the role of interfacial H2O are rarely discussed. Here we introduce tetrafluoroborate anion (BF4 -) into the sulfate-based electrolyte to regulate the interfacial H+ and H2O activity. First, BF4 - hydrolysis increases the electrolyte’s acidity, promoting MnO2 dissolution. Second, BF4 - forms an H-bond network with interfacial H2O that assists H+ diffusion while retaining sufficient H2O supply to facilitate MnO2 deposition. As a result, the cathode-free Zn//MnO2 electrolytic cell achieves a high plateau of ~1.92 V and energy efficiency of ~84.23 % in the BF4 - containing electrolyte. Significantly, the cell delivers 1000 cycles at 1 C with ~100 % Coulombic efficiency and a high energy efficiency retention of 93.65 %. Our findings disclose a new strategy to promote Mn2+/MnO2 platform voltage and energy efficiency for future large-scale energy storage systems.

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