Initial Evolution of Passivation Layers in Non-Aqueous Aluminium Batteries
Journal article, 2023

Aluminium batteries (AlBs) have gathered considerable attention, primarily due to the high capacity, the low cost, the large abundance in the Earth’s crust, and the recyclability of the Al metal anode. However, several hurdles must be surpassed to make AlBs a feasible energy storage technology and two of them are interconnected; the presence of an ionic and electronically insulating native oxide layer on the Al metal anode that calls for special non-aqueous, most often ionic liquid based acidic electrolytes, to enable reversible plating and stripping of Al. We here find the passivation layer initially formed in contact with an ionic liquid electrolyte (ILE) to have a porous and very complex nature, i.e. an outer inorganic/organic layer and an inner oxide-rich layer. Furthermore, it grows under open circuit voltage conditions by simultaneous dissolution and re-deposition of dissolved products, while during galvanostatic cycling this is exacerbated by an electrochemical etching that causes pitting corrosion of the Al metal itself. All of this leads to unstable interfaces being formed and the co-existence of several species at the Al metal anode surface, of which a proper understanding and mitigation are crucial to make AlBs a reality.

Author

Laura Loaiza Rodriguez

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Physics

Niklas Lindahl

University of Gothenburg

Patrik Johansson

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Physics

Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

0013-4651 (ISSN) 1945-7111 (eISSN)

Vol. 170 3 030512

Subject Categories

Inorganic Chemistry

Materials Chemistry

Corrosion Engineering

DOI

10.1149/1945-7111/acb108

More information

Latest update

3/24/2023