Engineers at Monash University in Australia have developed a new catalyst that, according to them, could bring zinc air batteries “closer to Real-World, Raster scale and transport use”.
Monash University Researchers have developed a cobalt-iron catalyst that significantly improves performance and significantly improves the lifespan of zinc air batteries, achieving remarkable stability over “thousands of cycles.”
Zinc batteries have long been announced as a potential solution for large-scale energy storage and transport applications. They have a high theoretical energy density, are made of abundant and cheap materials and are considered safer than many conventional alternatives.
However, the path to commercialization for technology has been a challenge with important obstacles, including the slow kinetics of oxygen reduction and oxygen evolution reactions in the air cathode that leads to high load/discharge overpotential, low efficiency, reduced energy capacity and a shorter lifespan of the cycle.
Researchers from the Chemical and Biological Engineering department of Monash University have now designed a cobalt-iron catalyst, called COFE-2DSA, which makes the battery’s oxygen reactions much faster and more efficient.
With the help of a heat treatment, they changed a 3D material in ultra-thin carbon blades and added individual cobalt and iron atoms to create a catalyst that co-guiding author Saeed Askari said it was better than the standard commercial catalysts made from expensive metals such as platinum and ruthenium.
“Through cobalt and iron as individual atoms on a carbon framework, we have achieved record -breaking performance in zinc air batteries, which show what is possible when catalysts are designed with atomrecisie,” he said.
“Our advanced simulations showed that the cobalt-ikzeren Atomomparen, combined with nitrogen drugs, improve the load transfer and optimize reactie finish, to resolve one of the largest bottlenecks for rechargeable zinc air batteries.”
The researchers reported that the COFE-2DSA battery “had performed better than commercial and reported catalysts”, which reaches a power density of 229.6 milliwatt per square centimeter and an energy density of 997 WH per kilogram.
In addition, the electrical catalyst showed exceptional bicycle stability, with consistent performance maintaining for 74 days and 3,552 cycles.
The researchers said that the results paves the road for scalable innovations, including for energy storage applications on a grid scale and as an alternative to current lithium ion batteries in electric vehicles.
“A rechargeable zinc air battery is continuously running a milestone in front of the field for more than two months,” said Co-Lead Author Dr. Parama Banerjee. “It shows that this technology is ready to go beyond the laboratory and in practical applications.”
The results appear in the research paper Synergetic electronic interplay between co-fe single atom and nitrogen on 2D carbon boost bifunctional oxygen redox in metal-air batteriesPublished in the Nature communication.
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