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Abstract Flash droughts are abrupt and rapid intensification of droughts that affect agriculture, water, and ecosystems and are commonplace in South Asia. Despite their potential impact, flash drought evolution characteristics and underlying mechanisms in South Asia remain underexplored. We use a multivariate approach to analyze the onset speed, frequency, severity, duration, and return period of flash droughts, and the role of atmospheric circulation and human-induced climate change. We find that flash droughts are more common and intense in the crop season, especially in central India, western Pakistan, and eastern Afghanistan. They are caused by persistent atmospheric patterns that block moisture transport to South Asia. Additionally, anthropogenic climate change has intensified flash droughts in the spring-summer season, with a median fraction of attributable risk of 60%, 80%, and 90% for Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India, respectively. Our results suggest that flash droughts will expand and worsen in the future, requiring adaptation measures for the water, agriculture, and energy sectors.more » « less
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Abstract Aqueous trivalent metal batteries represent a compelling candidate for energy storage due to the intriguing three‐electron transfer reaction and the distinct properties of trivalent cations. However, little research progress has been achieved with trivalent batteries due to the inappropriate redox potentials and drastic ion hydrolysis side reactions. Herein, the appealing yet underrepresented trivalent indium is selected as an advanced metal choice and the crucial effect of substrate on its plating mechanism is revealed. When copper foil is used, an indiophilic indium‐copper alloy interface can be formed in situ upon plating, exhibiting favorable binding energies and low diffusion energy barriers for indium atoms. Consequently, a planar, smooth, and dense indium metal layer is uniformly deposited on the copper substrate, leading to outstanding plating efficiency (99.8–99.9%) and an exceedingly long lifespan (6.4–7.4 months). The plated indium anode is further paired with a high‐mass‐loading Prussian blue cathode (2 mAh cm−2), and the full cell (negative/positive electrode capacity, N/P = 2.5) delivers an excellent cycling life of 1000 cycles with 72% retention. This work represents a significant advancement in the development of high‐performance trivalent metal batteries.more » « less
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Abstract High‐voltage lithium metal batteries with nickel‐rich oxide cathodes (LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2, NCM811) represent one of the most promising approaches to achieve high energy density up to 500 Wh kg−1. However, severe interfacial side reactions occur at both NCM811 cathode and lithium anode at ultrahigh voltages (>4.6 V). To address these issues, various electrolytes have been developed, but they still suffer from electrolyte decomposition, leading to moderate voltages and insufficient cycling. Herein, we introduce (3,3,3‐trifluoropropyl)trimethoxy silane (TTMS) as an asymmetrically fluorinated single solvent, which incorporates both strongly solvating (─OCH3) and weakly solvating (─CF3) groups. The designed 2.1 mol L−1(M) LiFSI/TTMS electrolyte achieves excellent compatibility with both NCM811 cathode and Li metal anode due to its unique anion‐dominating solvation structures and inorganic‐rich interphase formation. Consequently, it enables stable cycling in the Li||NCM811 battery at an ultrahigh voltage of 4.8 V, with 84.5% capacity retention after 300 cycles. Even under more aggressive conditions, including high temperature (60 °C) and anode‐less configuration (N/P ratio = 1.76), the Li||NCM811 battery exhibits remarkable capacity retention (>80%) over 300 cycles. This work underscores the effectiveness of electrolyte engineering for developing ultrahigh‐voltage and long‐cycling battery systems.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 10, 2026
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Abstract Solid‐state batteries (SSBs) are competitive contenders for energy storage due to their inherent safety and high energy. However, the lack of an appropriate anode has hindered their development. Graphite and lithium metal are widely used anode materials, but graphite suffers from a low capacity, whereas lithium metal presents severe dendrite and reactivity challenges. Herein, the promising performance of micro‐sized alloys is demonstrated as high‐capacity and long‐cycling anodes for SSBs. Using antimony as a model anode, its full theoretical capacity (660 mAh g−1), high‐rate capability (3 A g−1), and long cycling life (1000–2000 cycles) is achieved at room temperature. Comparative studies further reveal an overlooked “micro‐size effect”, where micro‐sized alloys establish more efficient electron/ion conduction pathways, significantly exceeding their nano‐sized counterparts. This micro‐size effect challenges the conventional belief that nano‐sized alloys always outperform micro‐sized ones. Based on this discovery, similarly high performance of other micro‐alloys (lead and bismuth) in SSBs is further demonstrated. Given the additional benefits of easy synthesis, low cost, high tap density, and high stability, micro‐sized alloys hold great promise as excellent anode candidates for SSBs.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available June 29, 2026
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