A Solar and Seawater Co‐Involved Durable Rechargeable Battery Enabled by Crown Ether‐Rich Polymer‐Mediated Photoelectrodes

Author:

Wang Xiaotong1,Li Jing2,Liu Cong1,Lin Yi1,Yang Fan3,Zhong Linfeng1,Zhang Yang1,Yu Dingshan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory for Polymeric Composite and Functional Materials of Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of High Performance Polymer‐based Composites of Guangdong Province GBRCE for Functional Molecular Engineering, School of Chemistry Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou Guangdong 410000 China

2. Institute of Applied Physics and Materials Engineering University of Macau Taipa Macao SAR 999078 China

3. School of Chemical Engineering and Technology Sun Yat‐sen University Zhuhai 519082 China

Abstract

AbstractThe first flow‐type solar and seawater co‐mediated sodium‐air rechargeable battery (SSRB) for efficient solar‐to‐electrochemical energy conversion/storage is established. Such SSRB is enabled by a robust self‐regulated CEP/ZnWO4/WO3 heterojunction photoelectrochemical electrodes (PE) by passivating predesigned crown ether‐rich photoresponsive covalent organic polymer (CEP) layers onto ZnWO4‐modified WO3 nanosheet arrays. The PE design utilizes the previously‐unexplored self‐mediated effect of CEP to endow PE with superior stability, facilitated electrode reaction kinetics, and high efficiency of spatial charge separation simultaneously. This leads to remarkable light‐enhanced oxygen evolution catalysis with impressive photocurrent density up to 6.1 mA cm−2 at 1.23 V versus RHE in seawater – surpassing metal‐oxide‐based PEs ever reported for seawater splitting. Thus, the SSRB breaks the limit of the equilibrium voltage (3.47 V) of conventional seawater sodium‐air cells to deliver a low charge voltage of 2.71 V along with stable photo‐charge over 100 h and good photo‐charge/normal discharge cycling stability over 240 h – superior to almost all existing light‐involved air batteries. Combined experimental and modeling studies for the first time unveil the multi‐regulation effects of CEP passivation which prevents detrimental Cl‐corrosion, and promote oxygen evolution kinetics.

Funder

Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Electrochemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,Biomaterials,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials

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