Publications by authors named "Shengan Wu"

Highly Li-concentrated electrolytes are acknowledged for their compatibility with Li metal negative electrodes and high voltage positive electrodes to achieve high-energy Li metal batteries, showcasing stable and facile interfaces for Li deposition/dissolution and high anodic stability. This study aims to explore a highly concentrated electrolyte by adopting entropy-driven chemistry for Li metal-free (so-called anode-free) batteries. The combination of lithium bis(fluorosulfonyl)amide (LiFSA) and lithium trifluoromethanesulfonate (LiOTf) salts in a pyrrolidinium-based ionic liquid is found to significantly modify the coordination structure, resulting in an unprecedented 60 mol% Li concentration and a low solvent-to-salt ratio of 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Highly Li-concentrated electrolytes have been widely studied to harness their uniquely varying bulk and interface properties that arise from their distinctive physicochemical properties and coordination structures. Similar strategies have been applied in the realm of ionic liquid electrolytes to exploit their improved functionalities. Despite these prospects, the impact of organic cation behavior on interfacial processes remains largely underexplored compared to the widely studied anion behavior.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The combination effects of triazole fungicides on aquatic organisms remain largely unknown. In current study, an integrated histological, transcriptome, metabonomics and microbiology was applied to investigate the mixture effects and risk of tebuconazole (TEB) and difenoconazole (DIF) co-exposure on zebrafish liver and gonad at aquatic life benchmark. TEB and DIF mixture showed additive effect on the acute toxicity to adult zebrafish, the combined toxicity on liver was less than the additive effect of individual TEB and DIF, and TEB and DIF mixture also reduced the toxic effects on gonad and intestinal microflora.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rechargeable aqueous zinc-ion batteries have been considered as a promising candidate for next-generation batteries. However, the formation of zinc dendrites are the most severe problems limiting their practical applications. To develop stable zinc metal anodes, a synergistic method is presented that combines the Cu-Zn solid solution interface on a copper mesh skeleton with good zinc affinity and a polyacrylamide electrolyte additive to modify the zinc anode, which can greatly reduce the overpotential of the zinc nucleation and increase the stability of zinc deposition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF