Apr 26, 2024
8:15am - 8:30am
Room 422, Level 4, Summit
Chris Rahn1,Shuhua Shan1,Mihir Parekh2,Rong Kou1,Donghai Wang1
Pennsylvania State University1,Clemson University2
Chris Rahn1,Shuhua Shan1,Mihir Parekh2,Rong Kou1,Donghai Wang1
Pennsylvania State University1,Clemson University2
Alkaline electrolyte flow through porous Zn anodes and Ni(OH)<sub>2 </sub>cathodes can overcome diffusion limits, reduce dendrite growth, and improve cycle life. Zinc deposition morphology improves with low flow rates for KOH/ZnO electrolytes at current densities near the diffusion-limited regime. Zinc dendrites present without flow are suppressed by micrometer-per-second flow at concentrations ranging from 0.2 to 0.6 M ZnO dissolved in 6 M and 10 M KOH solutions. Zn-Cu asymmetric cell tests reveal that flowing electrolyte increases the lifespan by more than 6 times in the diffusion-limited regime by suppressing gas evolution and dendrite formation. Ni-Zn cell tests show that a flow-assisted battery cycles 1500 times with over 95% Coulombic efficiency (CE) at 35 mA/cm<sup>2</sup> current density and 7 mAh/cm<sup>2</sup> charge capacity, increasing the battery lifespan by 17 times compared with a stagnant electrolyte Ni-Zn cell. Flow-through electrolyte also stabilizes the Zn electrode in the over-limiting regime, achieving approximately 4 times increased lifespan and 297 cycles with over 90% CE at 52 mA/cm<sup>2</sup>.