Abstract

The narrow electrochemical stability window (1.23 V) of an aqueous electrolyte hinders the practical realization of calcium-ion chemistries of high-energy-density and long-cycle-life batteries. Furthermore, developing an aqueous electrolyte that is low cost, is environmentally friendly, and has a wide voltage window is essential to designing safe, high-energy-density, and sustainable calcium-ion batteries. A calcium-based water-in-salt (WISE) aqueous electrolyte surpasses the narrow stability window by offering a 2.12 V wide window by suppressing the hydrogen evolution at the anode and minimizing the overall water activity at the cathode. A comprehensive theoretical study predicts the preferential reduction of salt aggregates over water to form a passivation layer at the electrode-electrolyte interface and enhance the electrolyte stability window. Additionally, Raman spectroscopy reveals that the calcium ion coordination number, which is the number of nitrate ions surrounding the calcium ions in the aqueous electrolyte, gradually increases with an increase in the electrolyte concentration, leading to a gradual decrease in the hydration number of the calcium ions. A full cell in WISE was demonstrated to exhibit an excellent rate capability and cycling stability with negligible capacity loss (0.01 per cycle), maintaining 80% capacity retention over 1800 cycles with ∼99.99% Coulombic efficiency. The full cell provides an energy density of 232 Wh kg-1 at a power density of 69 W kg-1 and a current rate of 0.15 A g-1. Even at a higher current rate of 5 A g-1, the battery delivers an energy density of 182 Wh kg-1 (based on the active mass of the anode). This is one of the best performances to date of all previously reported full-cell aqueous calcium-ion batteries. A fundamental understanding of the storage mechanism and a electrode degradation study was achieved. This work suggests and expands new avenues for the practical realization of low-cost, safe, eco-friendly, and high-performance aqueous calcium-ion batteries for future large storage applications.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call