A Biomimetic Cement-Based Solid-State Electrolyte with Both High Strength and Ionic Conductivity for Self-Energy-Storage Buildings

Author:

Lin Wei1,Xing Jiarui1,Zhou Yang1ORCID,Pan Long2,Yang Li2,Zhang Yuan2,Liu Xiong Xiong2,Xiong Chenchen1,Li Weihuan1,Sun ZhengMing2

Affiliation:

1. Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Construction Materials, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing 211189, China.

2. Key Laboratory of Advanced Metallic Materials of Jiangsu Province, School of Materials, Science and Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing 211189, China.

Abstract

Cement-based materials are the foundation of modern buildings but suffer from intensive energy consumption. Utilizing cement-based materials for efficient energy storage is one of the most promising strategies for realizing zero-energy buildings. However, cement-based materials encounter challenges in achieving excellent electrochemical performance without compromising mechanical properties. Here, we introduce a biomimetic cement-based solid-state electrolyte (labeled as l -CPSSE) with artificially organized layered microstructures by proposing an in situ ice-templating strategy upon the cement hydration, in which the layered micropores are further filled with fast-ion-conducting hydrogels and serve as ion diffusion highways. With these merits, the obtained l -CPSSE not only presents marked specific bending and compressive strength (2.2 and 1.2 times that of traditional cement, respectively) but also exhibits excellent ionic conductivity (27.8 mS·cm −1 ), overwhelming most previously reported cement-based and hydrogel-based electrolytes. As a proof-of-concept demonstration, we assemble the l -CPSSE electrolytes with cement-based electrodes to achieve all-cement-based solid-state energy storage devices, delivering an outstanding full-cell specific capacity of 72.2 mF·cm −2 . More importantly, a 5 × 5 cm 2 sized building model is successfully fabricated and operated by connecting 4 l -CPSSE-based full cells in series, showcasing its great potential in self-energy-storage buildings. This work provides a general methodology for preparing revolutionary cement-based electrolytes and may pave the way for achieving zero-carbon buildings.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Young Elite Scientists Sponsorship Program by CAST

Fund of Key Laboratory of Advanced Materials of Ministry of Education

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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