Iodide-mediated intermediate regulation strategy enables high-capacity and ultra-stable zinc-iodine batteries

Zhijie Xu, Jiaqi Yang, Peng Sun, Yaoyu Chen, Zhengxiao Ji, Xusheng Wang, Min Xu, Jinliang Li, Likun Pan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The practical implementation of aqueous zinc-iodine (Zn-I2) batteries is hindered by the limited cathode capacity, rampant Zn dendrite formation, and anode corrosion issues. In this work, we propose a novel iodide-mediated intermediate regulation strategy achieved through a rationally designed combination of zinc iodide (ZnI2) and high-loading cathodes. Mechanistic studies reveal that iodide ions (I) generate abundant iodine active sites on the elemental iodine-embedded porous carbon cathode (I2@PAC), which facilitates the conversion of under-oxidized triiodide (I3) to pentaiodide (I5), thereby significantly enhancing cathode capacity. Concurrently, the I coordinate with Zn2+ to suppress the decomposition of coordinated water molecules, effectively mitigating side reactions and enabling dendrite-free Zn deposition morphology. These mechanisms collectively contribute to exceptional Coulombic efficiency (>99.7%) and outstanding cycling stability. The optimized Zn-I2 full cell achieves a remarkable specific capacity of 250.2 mAh g−1 at 0.2 A g−1, along with ultralong cycling durability exceeding 10 000 cycles while maintaining 85% capacity retention. This iodide-mediated intermediate regulation strategy provides a viable pathway for developing high-capacity and ultra-stable aqueous Zn-I2 batteries.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)13211-13220
Number of pages10
JournalChemical Science
Volume16
Issue number29
DOIs
StatePublished - 23 Jul 2025

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