Operando monitoring of ion activities in aqueous batteries with plasmonic fiber-optic sensors

Understanding ion transport kinetics and electrolyte-electrode interactions at electrode surfaces of batteries in operation is essential to determine their performance and state of health. However, it remains a challenging task to capture in real time the details of surface-localized and rapid ion t...

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Published inNature communications Vol. 13; no. 1; p. 547
Main Authors Wang, Runlin, Zhang, Haozhe, Liu, Qiyu, Liu, Fu, Han, Xile, Liu, Xiaoqing, Li, Kaiwei, Xiao, Gaozhi, Albert, Jacques, Lu, Xihong, Guo, Tuan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 27.01.2022
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Understanding ion transport kinetics and electrolyte-electrode interactions at electrode surfaces of batteries in operation is essential to determine their performance and state of health. However, it remains a challenging task to capture in real time the details of surface-localized and rapid ion transport at the microscale. To address this, a promising approach based on an optical fiber plasmonic sensor capable of being inserted near the electrode surface of a working battery to monitor its electrochemical kinetics without disturbing its operation is demonstrated using aqueous Zn-ion batteries as an example. The miniature and chemically inert sensor detects perturbations of surface plasmon waves propagating on its surface to rapidly screen localized electrochemical events on a sub-μm-scale thickness adjacent to the electrode interface. A stable and reproducible correlation between the real-time ion insertions over charge-discharge cycles and the optical plasmon response has been observed and quantified. This new operando measurement tool will provide crucial additional capabilities to battery monitoring methods and help guide the design of better batteries with improved electro-chemistries. Operando tracking the ion dynamics/states of battery is critical to understanding of electrolyte-electrode interactions. Here the authors propose to use the surface plasmon waves to rapidly screen localized electrochemical events on a sub-μm-scale thickness adjacent to the electrode interface, without perturbing battery operation.
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ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-28267-y