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Research PaperResearchia:202601.10c5c284[Materials Science > Materials Science]

A Rechargeable Chromium Battery

Apurva Anjan

Abstract

Multivalent ions exchange multiple electrons during redox reactions, leading to the possibility of improved energy storage performance. A variety of multivalent ions, including zinc (Zn2+^{2+}), magnesium (Mg2+^{2+}), calcium (Ca2+^{2+}), aluminum (Al3+^{3+}), and indium (In3+^{3+}), have been deployed in rechargeable batteries with varying degrees of success \cite{1-9}. While chromium (Cr3+^{3+}) offers a superior volumetric capacity (approximately 11117Β mAhΒ cmβˆ’311117\ \mathrm{mAh\ cm^{-3}}) compared to the aforementioned cations, there is no report of a rechargeable chromium battery. This is because chromium metal spontaneously oxidizes to form a passivating oxide layer \cite{10} that blocks Cr3+^{3+} ingress and egress. Here, we show that this fundamental limitation can be overcome by developing a chromium-rich high-entropy alloy. The alloy consists of five elements (Cr, bismuth (Bi), copper (Cu), tin (Sn), and nickel (Ni)), producing a multi-element native oxide rich in heterointerfaces. Some of these interfaces (such as Cr2_2O3_3/Bi2_2O3_3) exhibit a very low barrier for Cr3+^{3+} diffusion, offering multiple pathways for efficient Cr3+^{3+} insertion and extraction, while others (such as Cr2_2O3_3/CuO) block oxygen transport, thereby suppressing further oxidation. In a symmetric cell configuration, the chromium alloy supports approximately 1000010000 hours (about 50005000 cycles) of reversible chromium insertion and extraction at an overpotential of only 2020 mV. The chromium-rich alloy anode was also successfully paired with a sulfur cathode to cycle reversibly in a full-cell configuration. These findings could stimulate fundamental studies on chromium-ion batteries and high-entropy alloy electrodes, opening new pathways for multivalent energy storage.

Submission:1/10/2026
Comments:0 comments
Subjects:Materials Science; Materials Science
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