Hygroscopic Solutes Enable Non‐van der Waals Electrolytes for Fire‐Tolerant Dual‐Air Batteries

Author:

Xia Huarong1,Cao Shengkai2,Lv Zhisheng2,Wei Jiaqi1,Yuan Song13,Feng Xue4,Chen Xiaodong15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Innovative Center for Flexible Devices (iFLEX) School of Materials Science and Engineering Nanyang Technological University 50 Nanyang Avenue 639798 Singapore Singapore

2. Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE) Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) 2 Fusionopolis Way 138634 Singapore Singapore

3. Institute of Flexible Electronics Technology of THU Tsinghua University 314000 Jiaxing, Zhejiang China

4. Center for Flexible Electronics Technology Tsinghua University No. 30, Shuangqing Road 100084 Beijing China

5. Institute for Digital Analytics and Science (IDMxS) Nanyang Technological University 50 Nanyang Avenue 639798 Singapore Singapore

Abstract

AbstractThermal safety issues of batteries have hindered their large‐scale applications. Nonflammable electrolytes improved safety but solvent evaporation above 100 °C limited thermal tolerance, lacking reliability. Herein, fire‐tolerant metal‐air batteries were realized by introducing solute‐in‐air electrolytes whose hygroscopic solutes could spontaneously reabsorb the evaporated water solvent. Using Zn/CaCl2‐in‐air/carbon batteries as a proof‐of‐concept, they failed upon burning at 631.8 °C but self‐recovered then by reabsorbing water from the air at room temperature. Different from conventional aqueous electrolytes whose irreversible thermal transformation is determined by the boiling points of solvents, solute‐in‐air electrolytes make this transformation determined by the much higher decomposition temperature of solutes. It was found that stronger intramolecular bonds instead of intermolecular (van der Waals) interactions were strongly correlated to ultra‐high tolerance temperatures of our solute‐in‐air electrolytes, inspiring a concept of non‐van der Waals electrolytes. Our study would improve the understanding of the thermal properties of electrolytes, guide the design of solute‐in‐air electrolytes, and enhance battery safety.

Funder

National Research Foundation Singapore

Publisher

Wiley

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