Zinc Bromine Batteries: PEG-200 plus Tween 20 to eliminate dendrites, first public results ever!

In the past I have discussed zinc dendrites as one of the most important issues to deal with when creating Zn-Br batteries. While the effect of dendrites can be attenuated by using tall cells with large distances between the electrodes, these setups create high electric resistance that greatly diminishes energy efficiency. A high energy efficiency Zn-Br battery will therefore have the ability to reduce or eliminate zinc dendrites, such that a large number of cycles can be achieved without shorting the battery.

I have studied the use of PEG-200 quite extensively within this blog and although PEG-200 does reduce the formation of zinc dendrites, it also increases the internal resistance of the battery, to the point where the voltaic losses become unacceptable. At useful energy density values (>30 Wh/L) and acceptable charging currents (>10 mA/cm2), the maximum PEG-200 concentration for a 3M ZnBr2 solution is therefore restricted to around 1-3%.

Battery configuration used in the experiments discussed in this post.

Looking at other potential low cost solutions to eliminate zinc dendrites, this article using PEG and Tween 20 in alkaline batteries drew my attention. Although the article used PEG-600, it is reasonable to expect a similar effect with PEG-200, given that this has also been shown to reduce Zinc dendrites in alkaline batteries in multiple publications. It is particularly interesting that they can achieve this with a 0.5% PEG-600 + 0.5% Tween 20 solution, as this would be of practical use within Zn-Br batteries.

To investigate this, I bought some USP grade Tween 20. It is a very safe , non-ionic surfactant commonly used commonly for cosmetics. I then prepared a solution using ~1% PEG-200 and ~1% Tween-20 with 3M ZnBr2. I then assembled a battery as shown above. Note that although I have been using a separator-less setup during the last couple of weeks, I decided to try a fiber-glass based separator setup first, since this setup in the past suffered from dendrites at the edges that I believe might have been caused by surface tension issues with the solution. This problem is likely to be solved by the use of the Tween 20.

First eleven cycles, lighter plots are earlier cycles. Final CE and EE values shown. Charging was done to 15mAh at 15mA, discharge was done to 0.5V.
Coulombic and Energy efficiency evolution as a function of the charge/discharge cycle number.

The solution was easy to prepare and the Tween 20 did not generate any solubility issues. The assembly of the cell was quite interesting, while a 3M ZnBr2 solution (with or without PEG-200) normally takes around a minute to fully wick into the fiberglass separator and the GFE-1 cathode, this time the wicking was almost instantaneous, probably thanks to the use of the Tween 20, that greatly reduced the surface tension of the mixture.

The cycling of the cell is going on without any issues. After around 3 cycles, the magnitude of changes in the shape of the curves and capacity started to become smaller and smaller, with the battery currently settling at a CE ~ 92% and an EE ~ 68%. The total amount of charge extracted is around 13.8 mAh with an average potential of 1.46V, putting the energy density of the battery at this current density at around 30 Wh/L. I am so far amazed at the stability of this battery configuration with few aberrations showing in the charge/discharge curves and no signs of dendrites (so far). The above are the first ever published results – as far as I know – for a Zn-Br battery containing both PEG-200 and Tween 20.

An important early sign of dendrites is a decrease in the charging potential with time – as the zinc dendrites effectively enhance the surface area of the anode before shorting the battery – an effect that I haven’t observed after 11 cycles. Although still too soon, the above results are certainly encouraging, hopefully the synergistic effect between PEG and Tween 20 applies to the Zn-Br system as well.

4 thoughts on “Zinc Bromine Batteries: PEG-200 plus Tween 20 to eliminate dendrites, first public results ever!

  1. Giancarlo Buffon

    Great initial results! I am eagerly awaiting the Tween 20 (Polysorbate 20) I ordered to arrive. I thought it might be hard to get but I got mine from a candle crafting supplies shop. I also found it on a DIY perfume site along with Polysorbate 80 and Polysorbate 85.

    The dendrites have been a serious issue killing the majority of my test batteries that weren’t destroyed by the bromine itself. Here’s hoping this latest solution is the key to solving this.

    Thanks again for putting your research out there for all to see.

    Cheers.

    Reply
    1. danielfp Post author

      So far I’m seeing great results with the Tween 20 + PEG-200, as far as dendrites go. My batteries are now failing because of big voltaic losses that seem to just happen as a function of time (not caused by dendrites though). These might actually be related with the bromine intercalation of graphite I mentioned before which progressively damages the cathode so much that resistance becomes too big. I might actually have to change to Ti electrodes in my cell cathode in order to avoid these issues.

      Reply
      1. Giancarlo Buffon

        I think you are right about the intercalation of graphite with the bromine. I will be soon trying out a mix of activated carbon (ground up aquarium filter carbon) and NaSi water glass as a binder. Previously when I used graphite and NaSi around copper mesh, the resulting electrode was almost a short circuit when measured which was great, but was too porous (I’m guessing here) and the bromine soon killed it. Hopefully the normal carbon will work better.

        Can’t wait for my titanium foil to arrive. Good luck with your Ti electrodes 🙂

        Cheers.

        Reply

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