Fast Discharging Stabilizes Electrochemical Interfaces: Achieving Close-to-Unity Reversibility in “Dendrite-Forming” Battery Electrodes

23 June 2025, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Abstract: Developing resilient aqueous energy storage systems, such as Zn batteries, is essential for advancing energy sustainability powered by renewable sources. A key challenge in these systems is the dendritic growth of metals, which causes internal short circuits and poor rechargeability in battery electrodes. Classical diffusion-limited dendritic growth is predicted to occur when the charging rate exceeds the intrinsic limiting current density Jlim determined by electrolyte transport properties. Understanding the electrochemical behavior of dendrites is critical for designing fast-charging metal electrodes, where dendritic growth is not only likely but sometimes unavoidable due to uneven current distribution. Conventional wisdom suggests that these high-aspect-ratio fractal dendrites are susceptible to bottom-initiated dissolution, leading to mechanical break-off from the current collector and the formation of “dead” / orphaned metal. Surprisingly, our results show that near-unity charge-discharge reversibility can be achieved even with highly-ramified classical diffusion-limited dendritic Zn metal structures. In particular, the reversibility improves with an increasing discharge rate, demonstrating a strong positive correlation. A two-orders-of-magnitude (~200x) enhancement in cycle life is observed when Zn electrodes charged identically fast, but discharged at higher versus lower rates! Operando visualization reveals that dendrite fragmentation is significantly suppressed at higher discharge rates. Complementary post-mortem microstructural analysis shows that, consistent with predictions based on the Wagner number (Wa), high-rate discharges promote preferential tip-initiated stable retraction, whereas low-rate discharges induce “pitting” corrosion that mechanically weakens the dendrite backbone and promotes fragmentation. These findings challenge the prevailing assumption that dendritic growth necessarily limits the electrode reversibility and offer new design principles for metal battery electrodes operating at unprecedented high rates approaching the diffusion limit.

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Dissolution-at-high-rate
Description
Video showing dendrite dissolution at +0.5 V vs. Zn2+/Zn.
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Dissolution-at-low-rate
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Video showing dendrite dissolution at +0.1 V vs. Zn2+/Zn.
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Comment number 2, Brad: Jun 23, 2025, 18:20

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Comment number 1, Brad: Jun 23, 2025, 18:20

Cybersecurity experts may ethically monitor social media and mobile devices in limited circumstances to protect individuals from threats, exploitation, or to aid criminal investigations, and to safeguard organizations by preventing data loss, ensuring regulatory compliance, responding to incidents, or combating malware. Monitoring can also enhance public safety through threat intelligence or fighting serious cybercrime. However, such actions are only ethical with strict safeguards, including explicit consent, transparency, proportionality in data collection, data minimization, secure storage, legal compliance, and robust oversight. Without these, monitoring risks becoming unethical and may infringe on privacy or legal boundaries. Guard Your Digital World With Innovative Tech! Do you require social media access, a phone hack, email breach or website security fix? OR Do you simply wish to recover lost crypto funds, detect/track a location or carry out data alterations? Our Elite cybersecurity services cover everything from result upgrades to clearing debts and fixing credit. For Unparalleled security and reliable results, choose the best in the business. For further assistance, contact [email protected] or +1 862-660-2702 or Telegram: cyberhelpdesk00