Copper chloride (CuCl) was investigated for the first time as conversion-type positive electrode material in a rechargeable Al battery. The electrode was reversibly charged and discharged in an electrolyte solution of AlCl, dipropylsulfone, and toluene (1 : 10 : 5 molar ratio). The initial discharge capacity was about 370 mA h (g-CuCl) at 0.028C-rate (11 mA (g-CuCl)), which was almost the same as the theoretical value (399 mA h (g-CuCl)) and higher than that of insertion-type positive electrode materials as used in the rechargeable Al battery. Moreover, a two-stage discharge plateau voltage was observed at 1.5 V and 0.8 V, which was higher than other conversion type positive electrodes for the aluminum rechargeable battery. The high discharge voltage realized a high energy density of 426 mW h (g-CuCl), which is the highest energy density compared with other conversion type positive electrodes. Two different strategies were implemented to increase the lifetime of the cell, namely, increasing the upper cut-off voltage and decreasing the particle size of CuCl. The discharge capacity for the electrode at the second cycle was threefold that for a pristine CuCl electrode.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9076482 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra09158k | DOI Listing |
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