Manganese oxide catalysts for secondary zinc air batteries: from
Ikusi/ Ireki
Data
2017-02-09Egilea
Mainar, Aroa R.
Colmenares, Luis C.
Leonet, Olatz
Alcaide, Francisco
Weinberger, Stephan
Hacker, Viktor
Iruin, Elena
Urdampilleta, Idoia
Blázquez Martín, José Alberto
Laburpena
An efficient, durable and low cost air cathode with low polarization between the oxygen reduction
reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is essential for a high performance and durable
secondary zinc-air battery. Different valence states and morphologies of MnxOy catalysts were
synthetized via thermal treatment of EMD (generating Mn2O3 and Mn3O4) and acid digestion of
synthetized Mn2O3 (producing a-MnO2) in order to develop an efficient Bifunctional Air Electrode (BAE).
Change in the ratio H+ to Mn2O3 during the acid digestion affects the sample microporosity, the
crystallographic plane distribution, as well as the physical and chemical adsorbed water which was
related to defects, i.e. cation vacancies (Mn4+) and Mn3+. These characteristics were discussed and linked
to the electrocatalytic activity. The best ORR performing catalyst was that with the higher surface water
content (associated to material BET surface area) and a (310) surface as the 2nd more contributing plane
(after 211). On the other hand, the catalyst with the higher structural water and with (110) and (200)
crystallographic planes being the most intensity contributors (after 211) was the most OER active
material. In this work, it was able to
find a relationship between catalyst structure and air-efficiency
through a volcano-like relationship between air-efficiency and surface water content. Air-efficiency (also
take as round-efficiency discharge/charge in battery context) can be taken as a good descriptor of
potentially good materials for Zn-Air secondary batteries technology. In this term, we were able to
prepare a Bifunctional Air Electrode based on the selected a-MnO2 sample which demonstrated a roundefficiency
of 53%, a DV around 1 V and a neglected loss of the charge potential (about 2.1 V) over the entire
lifecycle test (more 200 cycles over 30 hours) with a capacity retention superior to 95%.