Aqueous Zn‐metal batteries are the most promising system for large‐scale energy storage due to their high capacity, high safety, and low cost. The Zn‐metal anode, however, suffers from continuous parasitic reactions, random dendrite growth, and sluggish kinetics in aqueous electrolytes. Herein, a high donor number solvent, tetramethylurea (TMU), is introduced as electrolyte additive to enable highly reversible Zn‐metal anode, where the TMU can 1) preferentially adsorb on the Zn surface to inhibit Zn corrosion and suppress parasitic reaction, 2) solvate with Zn2+ and exclude the H2O from Zn2+ solvation sheath to weaken water activity significantly, and 3) contribute to form an inorganic‐organic bilayer solid electrolyte interphase to enable homogeneous and rapid Zn2+ transport kinetic for dendrite‐free Zn deposition. Benefiting from these three merits, the resulting aqueous electrolyte demonstrates a highly reversible Zn plating/stripping cycling in a Zn||Ti asymmetric cell for over 1200 cycles and in a Zn||Zn symmetric cell for over 4000 h. As a proof‐of‐concept, the aqueous Zn‐metal full cells assembled with various state‐of‐the‐art cathodes also deliver excellent cycling performance even with a 10 µm thin Zn anode, favoring the practical application.
Lithium metal batteries hold great promise for promoting energy density and operating at low temperatures, yet they still suffer from insufficient Li compatibility and slow kinetic, especially at ultra‐low temperatures. Herein, we rationally design and synthesize a new amphiphilic solvent, 1,1,2,2‐tetrafluoro‐3‐methoxypropane, for use in battery electrolytes. The lithiophilic segment is readily to solvate Li+ to induce self‐assembly of the electrolyte solution to form a peculiar core‐shell‐solvation structure. Such unique solvation structure not only largely improves the ionic conductivity to allow fast Li+ transport and lower the desolvation energy to enable facile desolvation, but also leads to the formation of a highly robust and conductive inorganic SEI. The resulting electrolyte demonstrates high Li efficiency and superior cycling stability from room temperature to −40 °C at high current densities. Meanwhile, anode‐free high‐voltage cell retains 87 % capacity after 100 cycles.
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