Nature Communications (Jan 2025)

A tellurium iodide perovskite structure enabling eleven-electron transfer in zinc ion batteries

  • Shixun Wang,
  • Zhiquan Wei,
  • Hu Hong,
  • Xun Guo,
  • Yiqiao Wang,
  • Ze Chen,
  • Dechao Zhang,
  • Xiaoyu Zhang,
  • Xuyong Yang,
  • Chunyi Zhi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55385-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The growing potential of low-dimensional metal-halide perovskites as conversion-type cathode materials is limited by electrochemically inert B-site cations, diminishing the battery capacity and energy density. Here, we design a benzyltriethylammonium tellurium iodide perovskite, (BzTEA)2TeI6, as the cathode material, enabling X- and B-site elements with highly reversible chalcogen- and halogen-related redox reactions, respectively. The engineered perovskite can confine active elements, alleviate the shuttle effect and promote the transfer of Cl- on its surface. This allows for the utilization of inert high-valent tellurium cations, eventually realizing a special eleven-electron transfer mode (Te6+/Te4+/Te2-, I+/I0/I-, and Cl0/Cl-) in suitable electrolytes. The Zn||(BzTEA)2TeI6 battery exhibited a high capacity of up to 473 mAh g-1 Te/I and a large energy density of 577 Wh kg-1 Te/I at 0.5 A g-1, with capacity retention up to 82% after 500 cycles at 3 A g-1. The work sheds light on the design of high-energy batteries utilizing chalcogen-halide perovskite cathodes.