Suppressed Manganese Oxides Shuttling in Acidic Electrolytes Extends Shelf‐Life of Electrolytic Proton Batteries

Author:

Wu Sicheng1,Guo Haocheng1,Su Zhen1,Jia Chen1,Zhang Xinyi1,Wang Shuhao1,Zhao Tingwen1,Meyer Quentin1,Zhao Chuan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemistry Faculty of Science University of New South Wales Sydney NSW 2052 Australia

Abstract

AbstractAqueous proton batteries are promising candidates for the harvest and utilization of renewable yet intermittent energies. The redox couple of MnO2/Mn2+ is one of the most competitive cathodes to enable proton batteries with high voltage. However, electrolytic products of the MnO2/Mn2+ reactions tend to disperse into acidic electrolytes, and the composition of the electrolytic products as well as their influences on the counter electrode and the overall batteries are still unclear. Herein, the behaviors of the manganese electrolysis are studied with electrolytes of different proton concentrations and under variant current densities. The electrolytic products are disclosed to be ɛ‐MnO2 regardless of the acidities of electrolytes and report, for the first time, the dispersed MnO2 can chemically oxidize or dissolve the anode materials and subsequently induce self‐discharging. A membrane‐assisted protection strategy is proposed to prevent the free‐shuttle of MnO2 particles and mitigate the battery self‐discharging. Accordingly, a much‐enhanced shelf‐life performance (61.3% capacity retention over a one‐week rest) is achieved for pyrene‐4,5,9,10‐tetraone//MnO2 full‐cell. Furthermore, a customized device is developed with Nafion membrane, reaching excellent cycling stability (3000 cycles, 54 days) and a low self‐discharging rate. The findings and strategies for mitigating the self‐discharging issues are anticipated to advance the MnO2/Mn2+‐based aqueous batteries and beyond.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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