Electrochemical Cycling Behaviour and Shape Changes of Zn Electrodes in Mildly Acidic Aqueous Electrolytes Containing Quaternary Ammonium Salts

Author:

Bozzini Benedetto1ORCID,Boniardi Marco2,Caielli Tommaso1,Casaroli Andrea2,Emanuele Elisa1,Mancini Lucia34,Sodini Nicola4,Strada Jacopo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Energy Politecnico di Milano via Lambruschini 4 20156 Milano Italy

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering Politecnico di Milano via la Masa 1 20156 Milano Italy

3. Slovenian National Building and Civil Engineering Institute (ZAG) Dimičeva ulica 12 SI-1000 1000 Ljubljana Slovenia

4. Elettra – Sincrotrone Trieste S.C.p.A. S.S. 14–km 163.5 in Area Science Park 34149, Basovizza Trieste Italy

Abstract

AbstractSecondary Zn–based batteries are a valid alternative to Li for stationary storage, but commercial devices are not yet available, chiefly owing to anode shape‐change and passivation issues. Mildly acidic aqueous solutions are actively studied, since they seem to limit unstable growth of Zn, with respect to the alkaline ones, customary for primary batteries. Additives can further improve the performance of mildly acidic electrolytes. In this work we focus on the impact of a series of quaternary ammonium salts (TBAB, CTAB, DMDTDAB, BDMPAC, BPPEI, PDADMAC), selected to represent a comprehensive range of molecular functionalities. Electrochemical measurements (cyclic voltammetry, chronopotentiometry and galvanostatic‐cycling in split‐cells), combined with 2D and 3D imaging techniques (SEM, stereomicroscopy and in situ tomography) were adopted for the assessment Zn behaviour. This multi‐technique approach pinpointed TBAB as the single most effective additive for low‐current density operation, while at high current densities the additive‐free electrolyte allows better cycling performance, coherently with similar results for alkaline electrolytes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Electrochemistry,Catalysis

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