Interfacial-polarization-driven charge dynamics enables >6000-hour stability in oxide-based rechargeable metal-air batteriesopen access
- Authors
- Balamurugan, Chandran; Lee, Changhoon; Kim, Young Yong; Jo, Yong-Ryun; Park, Byoungwook; Chae, Keun Hwa; Cho, Kyusang; Lee, Chesin; Lim, Namsoo; Sung, Junyeong; Wang, Guanjie; Lee, Sungmin; Lee, Hyeonryul; Shim, Ji Hoon; Pak, Yusin; Kwon, Sooncheol
- Issue Date
- Mar-2026
- Publisher
- Elsevier B.V.
- Keywords
- >6000 h long-term cycling stability; Bifunctional oxygen electrocatalysis; Operando spectroscopy; Perovskite heterostructures; Single-atom alloy catalysts; Zinc-air batteries
- Citation
- Energy Storage Materials, v.86, pp 1 - 16
- Pages
- 16
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Energy Storage Materials
- Volume
- 86
- Start Page
- 1
- End Page
- 16
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/63889
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.ensm.2026.104979
- ISSN
- 2405-8297
2405-8289
- Abstract
- Durability remains the central bottleneck in oxygen electrocatalysts and metal-air batteries, where structural degradation and interfacial instability limit lifetime. Here we report a bifunctional oxygen catalyst that achieves unprecedented stability, over 6240 h (≈18,720) cycles, in a rechargeable Zn-air battery using a purely metal-oxide framework. The catalyst integrates electrochemically dispersed AgMn single-atom-alloy (SAA) sites with a Ni-metal-coated NiO@YFeO<inf>3</inf> perovskite core-shell, forming a triply coupled architecture that generates a built-in-interfacial field and drives bidirectional charge redistribution. The YFeO<inf>3</inf> core provides Fe3+/Fe2+ redox buffering, the NiO shell undergoes adaptive reconstruction during oxygen evolution, and the atomic-layer-deposited Ni layer ensures continuous conductivity and interfacial cohesion. At the surface, AgMn SAA sites induce localized polarization through Mn↔Ni charge transfer and Ag-assisted charge stabilization, tuning oxygen-intermediate energetics and mitigating structural fatigue. Consequently, the catalyst exhibits an oxygen-evolution overpotential of 140 mV at 10 mAcm-2 and oxygen-reduction half-wave potential of 0.86 V (∆E = 0.51 V), surpassing Pt/C and RuO<inf>2</inf> benchmarks. In Zn-air batteries, it delivers 356.4 mW cm-2 peak power and 1047 Wh kg-1 energy density. Operando vibrational spectroscopy confirms reversible OOH intermediates and sustained surface reconstruction, while in situ grazing-incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering verifies reversible Zn0/Zn2+ transitions and dendrite suppression. © © 2026. Published by Elsevier B.V.
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Collections - College of Engineering > Department of Energy and Materials Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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