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Xiaorui Liu

Researcher at Tianjin University

Publications -  37
Citations -  1588

Xiaorui Liu is an academic researcher from Tianjin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electrolyte & Battery (electricity). The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 24 publications receiving 681 citations.

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Decoupling electrolytes towards stable and high-energy rechargeable aqueous zinc–manganese dioxide batteries

TL;DR: In this article, an electrolyte-decoupling strategy was proposed to maximize the full potential of Zn-MnO2 batteries by simultaneously enabling the optimal redox chemistry of both the Zn and MnO2 electrodes.
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Utilizing solar energy to improve the oxygen evolution reaction kinetics in zinc-air battery.

TL;DR: A sunlight-promoted rechargeable zinc–air battery in which photoelectrode is used as the air electrode to substantially lower the charge potential under illumination is reported, which can be initially charged with an extremely low voltage.
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A Rechargeable Zn–Air Battery with High Energy Efficiency and Long Life Enabled by a Highly Water-Retentive Gel Electrolyte with Reaction Modifier

TL;DR: The optimized GPE enables flexible ZABs exhibiting an exceptionally low charge potential, a long cycling time of 200 h, a high energy efficiency, and rugged reliability under different extreme working conditions, and demonstrates their excellent practicability as flexible power sources.
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Water-in-salt electrolyte for safe and high-energy aqueous battery

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the latest advances of water-in-salt electrolyte in aqueous rechargeable batteries and discussed some challenges and prospects of water in salt electrolyte.
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Recent advances and challenges in divalent and multivalent metal electrodes for metal–air batteries

TL;DR: In this article, different types of MABs are overviewed from the perspective of the metal electrodes, and the advantages and disadvantages of each system are presented, and recent advances that address challenges such as corrosion, passivation and dendrite growth are introduced.