Competitive solvent occupation chemistry enabling robust four-electron conversion for anti-freezing aqueous zinc-iodine batteries

Abstract

Aqueous zinc-iodine batteries hold immense promise for sustainable energy storage, yet suffer from polyiodide shuttling and high-valent iodine instability. Challenges undergo catastrophic amplification at low-temperatures due to incomplete conversion and retarded redox kinetics, undermining performance and longevity. Here, a competitive solvent-occupation strategy is proposed to enable highly reversible four-electron conversion in aqueous zinc-iodine batteries across a wide-temperature range. The entropic hydrogen-bond reconstruction coupled with tailored desolvation dynamics mediates the thermodynamic stability and electrochemical redox depth of I+ species. This approach achieves a near-theoretical conversion depth of 97.2% and a high reversible capacity of 410.2 mAh g-1, where the high plateau at 1.68 V triggered by the I0/I+ couple contributes 51.7% of the total capacity at 1.0 A g-1. Even at -20 ℃, the battery maintains 100.0% capacity retention over 495 continuous days (11890 hours), while preserving stable high-voltage output at 1.55 V. Synergistic spectroscopy-modeling decouples the robust cryogenic mass-electron transfer pathways underlying the near-stoichiometric iodine conversion chemistry. This work pioneers a fundamental framework for designing energetic and temperature-adaptive aqueous zinc-iodine batteries.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Feb 2026
Accepted
07 Apr 2026
First published
09 Apr 2026

Energy Environ. Sci., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Competitive solvent occupation chemistry enabling robust four-electron conversion for anti-freezing aqueous zinc-iodine batteries

W. Xu, Z. Chang, H. Wang, B. Wang, H. Ding, J. Xu and X. Li, Energy Environ. Sci., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6EE00755D

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