Due to the great advantages of low cost, high capacity, and excellent safety, the Zn metal is a promising candidate material for rechargeable aqueous battery systems. However, its practical applications have been restricted by the uncontrollable dendrite growth and electrode side reactions (such as corrosion, passivation, and hydrogen evolution reactions) during the plating process. Herein, we reveal that the dendrite growth would expose the electrode to more highly active tips, exacerbating the passivation of the electrode and the decomposition of the electrolyte by in situ optical microscopies. We propose a low-cost, nontoxic, low-concentration (less than 1 g/L), and effective electrolyte additive, saccharin sodium, which can guide an even Zn deposition without obvious electrode side reactions in the charge/discharge process. The saccharin anion acts as a "traffic assistant" of Zn2+ and demonstrates its great potential for practical application. The assembled Zn symmetrical battery shows an excellent cycling performance at a high current density and capacity (an extremely long cycle life over 3800 h is obtained at 5 mA/cm2 and 8 mA h/cm2, and 20 mA/cm2 and 5 mA h/cm2 show a lifetime over 800 h), and the full cell (coupled to an AC electrode) presents a stable cycle life with a capacity retention of 86.4% even after 8000 cycles at 5 mA/cm2. The saccharin sodium proposed in this work is promising to solve the anode problems in advanced Zn batteries.
Keywords: Zn anode stabilization; Zn2+ ion battery; brightener; dendritic-free; interfacial modification.