动力学
化学
计算机科学
材料科学
生物物理学
物理
生物
量子力学
作者
Wenting Feng,Xinru Wei,Jianhang Yang,Chenyu Ma,Yiming Sun,Junwei Han,Debin Kong,Linjie Zhi
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-51033-1
摘要
Rechargeable sodium-chlorine (Na-Cl2) batteries show high theoretical specific energy density and excellent adaptability for extreme environmental applications. However, the reported cycle life is mostly less than 500 cycles, and the understanding of battery failure mechanisms is quite limited. In this work, we demonstrate that the substantially increased voltage polarization plays a critical role in the battery failure. Typically, the passivation on the porous cathode caused by the deposition of insulated sodium chloride (NaCl) is a crucial factor, significantly influencing the three-phase chlorine (NaCl/Na+, Cl-/Cl2) conversion kinetics. Here, a self-depassivation strategy enabled by iodine anion (I-)-tuned NaCl deposition was implemented to enhance the chlorine reversibility. The nucleation and growth of NaCl crystals are well balanced through strong coordination of the NaI deposition-dissolution process, achieving depassivation on the cathode and improving the reoxidation efficiency of solid NaCl. Consequently, the resultant Na-Cl2 battery delivers a super-long cycle life up to 2000 cycles. An iodine-induced self-depassivation strategy extends Na-Cl2 battery life to 2000 cycles by forming high-reactivity NaCl and lowering the chlorine conversion polarization, which successfully solves a key failure mechanism for superior reversibility.
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