Aqueous zinc-manganese (Zn-Mn) batteries have promising potential in large-scale energy storage applications since they are highly safe, environment-friendly, and low-cost. However, the practicality of Mn-based materials is plagued by their structural collapse and uncertain energy storage mechanism upon cycling. Herein, this work designs an amorphous manganese borate (a-MnBO ) material via disordered coordination to alleviate the above issues and improve the electrochemical performance of Zn-Mn batteries. The unique physicochemical characteristic of a-MnBO enables the inner a-MnBO to serve as a robust framework in the initial energy storage process. Additionally, the amorphous manganese dioxide, amorphous Zn MnO(OH) , and Zn SO (OH) ·4H O active components form on the surface of a-MnBO during the charge/discharge process. The detailed in situ/ex situ characterization demonstrates that the heterostructure of the inner a-MnBO and surface multicomponent phases endows two energy storage modes (Zn /H intercalation/deintercalation process and reversible conversion mechanism between the Zn MnO(OH) and Zn SO (OH) ·4H O) phases). Therefore, the obtained Zn//a-MnBO battery exhibits a high specific capacity of 360.4 mAh g , a high energy density of 484.2 Wh kg , and impressive cycling stability (97.0% capacity retention after 10 000 cycles). This finding on a-MnBO with a dual-energy storage mechanism provides new opportunities for developing high-performance aqueous Zn-Mn batteries.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10015855 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202205794 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!