TY - JOUR
T1 - Eco-friendly synthesis of vanadium metal-organic frameworks from gasification waste for wearable Zn-ion batteries
AU - Yang, Jie
AU - Tian, Hailin
AU - Li, Yang
AU - Li, He
AU - Li, Shuo
AU - Yang, Haitao
AU - Ding, Meng
AU - Wang, Xiaonan
AU - Chen, Po Yen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - To meet the ever-increasing energy storage demands, there is an urgent need for developing next-generation batteries with high energy densities from an eco-friendly and sustainable resource. Vanadium metal-organic frameworks (V-MOFs) are regarded as important electrode materials for aqueous Zn-ion batteries (ZIBs) due to their large specific surface areas, synthetic tenability, and high theoretical capacities. However, V-MOFs usually suffer from vanadium-induced toxicity and poor cation diffusivities, limiting their practical applications in ZIBs. Herein, an eco-friendly strategy is demonstrated to extract toxic vanadium from gasification waste to synthesize various vanadium oxides, which are the essential precursors for V-MOFs. By screening 11 V-MOF candidates through molecular dynamics simulation, MIL-47 was selected for the waste-derived synthesis because of its facile Zn2+ de-/intercalation. The waste-derived MIL-47 with cone-like microstructures is directly grown on a carbon nanotube fiber (w-MIL-47@CNT fiber), which can be used as the binder-free cathode for a fiber-shaped ZIB. Our fiber-shaped ZIB delivers high-rate performance (81.0% of capacity retention after 50-time current density increase), an ultrahigh stack volumetric energy density of 82.3 mWh cm–3, superior cycling performance over 2000 cycles (88.5% retention), and high mechanical stability, all of which meet wearable and portable battery requirements. Finally, life cycle assessments are performed to evaluate the environmental impact of each synthesis/fabrication step across 17 different categories, providing valuable optimization guidelines for producing ZIBs from gasification waste.
AB - To meet the ever-increasing energy storage demands, there is an urgent need for developing next-generation batteries with high energy densities from an eco-friendly and sustainable resource. Vanadium metal-organic frameworks (V-MOFs) are regarded as important electrode materials for aqueous Zn-ion batteries (ZIBs) due to their large specific surface areas, synthetic tenability, and high theoretical capacities. However, V-MOFs usually suffer from vanadium-induced toxicity and poor cation diffusivities, limiting their practical applications in ZIBs. Herein, an eco-friendly strategy is demonstrated to extract toxic vanadium from gasification waste to synthesize various vanadium oxides, which are the essential precursors for V-MOFs. By screening 11 V-MOF candidates through molecular dynamics simulation, MIL-47 was selected for the waste-derived synthesis because of its facile Zn2+ de-/intercalation. The waste-derived MIL-47 with cone-like microstructures is directly grown on a carbon nanotube fiber (w-MIL-47@CNT fiber), which can be used as the binder-free cathode for a fiber-shaped ZIB. Our fiber-shaped ZIB delivers high-rate performance (81.0% of capacity retention after 50-time current density increase), an ultrahigh stack volumetric energy density of 82.3 mWh cm–3, superior cycling performance over 2000 cycles (88.5% retention), and high mechanical stability, all of which meet wearable and portable battery requirements. Finally, life cycle assessments are performed to evaluate the environmental impact of each synthesis/fabrication step across 17 different categories, providing valuable optimization guidelines for producing ZIBs from gasification waste.
KW - Eco-friendly synthesis
KW - Fiber-shaped Zn-ion battery
KW - High volumetric energy density
KW - Life cycle analysis
KW - Vanadium metal-organic frameworks
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85138146546&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ensm.2022.09.009
DO - 10.1016/j.ensm.2022.09.009
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85138146546
SN - 2405-8297
VL - 53
SP - 352
EP - 362
JO - Energy Storage Materials
JF - Energy Storage Materials
ER -