The irreversible chemistry of the Zn anode, attributed to parasitic reactions and the growth of zinc dendrites, is the bottleneck in the commercialization of aqueous zinc-ion batteries. Herein, an efficient strategy via constructing an organic protective layer configured with a honeycomb-like globular-covalent organic framework (G-COF) was constructed to enhance the interfacial stability of Zn anodes. Theoretical analyses disclose that the methoxy and imine groups in G-COF have more negative adsorption energy and electrostatic potential distribution, favorable Zn2+ adsorption, and diffusion. Experimental results demonstrate that G-COF effectively protects the Zn anode from dendrite formation and surface corrosion, leading to a stable and homogeneous Zn2+ deposition. Notably, the G-COF@Zn||G-COF@Zn symmetric cell obtained high stability for over 1650 h under 3 mA cm-2 for 1 mA h cm-2. Full cells assembled with the δ-MnO2 cathode and G-COF@Zn anode demonstrates exceptional rate capability and consistent cycling over 1000 cycles at a current density of 1 A g-1, achieving a specific capacity of 217 mA h g-1. Our work provides novel insight into interfacial regulation of Zn anodes for the implementation of practical aqueous zinc-ion batteries with long-term cycling characteristics.
Keywords: aqueous zinc-ion batteries; artificial layer; covalent organic framework; interface engineering; stable dendrite-free anode.