Optimizing the sulfonic groups of a polymer to coat the zinc anode for dendrite suppression

Chem Commun (Camb). 2021 May 27;57(43):5326-5329. doi: 10.1039/d1cc00924a.

Abstract

The zinc metal anodes in aqueous zinc-ion batteries suffer from low cycling performance caused by uncontrolled dendrite. We have designed sulfonated poly-ether-ether-ketone (SPEEK) polymers as a surface coating layer on the zinc anode for dendrite suppression, in which the sulfonic groups in polymers act as effective active sites for zinc-ion diffusion. In SPEEK, the un-sulfonated domain serves as the framework and the sulfonated domain serves as the functional part to re-distribute the zinc ions. By optimizing the degree of SPEEK sulfonation, the best zinc anode coating has been achieved to present a high reversibility of over 1600 hours in symmetric cells and improved performance in full cells.