mobile background

RSC_Journal of Materials Chemistry A

관리자

fa078772de7d3.jpg2fb2eb8ed447e.jpg

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

06 January 2026, Issue 2,

Page 665 to 1346


Atomic-scale surface design for tailored nucleation in stable multivalent metal anodes


Achieving uniform and reversible magnesium (Mg) deposition is a critical bottleneck for the practical implementation of Mg metal batteries (MMBs), as uncontrolled nucleation and dendritic growth undermine interfacial stability and cycling performance. To address this, we introduce an atomic-level surface design strategy that guides Mg nucleation through precise interface engineering. To model this concept, we designed a freestanding porous carbon nanofiber framework embedded with Zn single atoms (ZnSA@PCF), derived from pyrolyzed electrospun PAN/ZIF-8 composites. This architecture simultaneously provides high surface area via uniformly distributed hollow nanocages and magnesiophilic Zn single-atom sites that serve as catalytic centers to direct Mg plating. This dual design significantly reduces the nucleation overpotential and enables dendrite-free Mg growth up to 5 mA h cm−2. The theoretical simulation results reveal strong Mg affinity at the introduced Zn SAC sites, while electrochemical tests demonstrate a high critical current density (17 mA cm−2) and ultra-stable cycling over 1500 h with 99.79% coulombic efficiency. This work establishes atomic-level catalyst engineering as a compelling paradigm for interfacial control in next-generation reversible MMBs.


  • Jun-Won Lee
  •  Jeong Ho Na
  • SeongJae Lee
  • Seonju Kim
  • Hee Seung Ryu
  •  Kyeounghak Kim
  •   Haeseong Jang
  •   Seung-Keun Park
  •  Hee-Dae Lim


https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2026/ta/d5ta06095h

Image created by minjeong Kim / Nanosphere