Free‐Standing α‐MoO 3 / Ti 3 C 2 MXene Hybrid Electrode in Water‐in‐Salt Electrolytes

While transition‐metal oxides such as α‐MoO 3 provide high capacity, their use is limited by modest electronic conductivity and electrochemical instability in aqueous electrolytes. Two‐dimensional (2D) MXenes, offer metallic conductivity, but their capacitance is limited in aqueous electrolytes. Ins...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy & environmental materials (Hoboken, N.J.) N.J.), 2023-07, Vol.6 (4)
Hauptverfasser: Saraf, Mohit, Shuck, Christopher E., Norouzi, Nazgol, Matthews, Kyle, Inman, Alex, Zhang, Teng, Pomerantseva, Ekaterina, Gogotsi, Yury
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:While transition‐metal oxides such as α‐MoO 3 provide high capacity, their use is limited by modest electronic conductivity and electrochemical instability in aqueous electrolytes. Two‐dimensional (2D) MXenes, offer metallic conductivity, but their capacitance is limited in aqueous electrolytes. Insertion of partially solvated cations into Ti 3 C 2 MXene from lithium‐based water‐in‐salt (WIS) electrolytes enables charge storage at positive potentials, allowing a wider potential window and higher capacitance. Herein, we demonstrate that α‐MoO 3 /Ti 3 C 2 hybrids combine the high capacity of α‐MoO 3 and conductivity of Ti 3 C 2 in WIS (19.8 m LiCl) electrolyte in a wide 1.8 V voltage window. Cyclic voltammograms reveal multiple redox peaks from α‐MoO 3 in addition to the well‐separated peaks of Ti 3 C 2 in the hybrid electrode. This leads to a higher specific charge and a higher rate capability compared to a carbon and binder containing α‐MoO 3 electrode. These results demonstrate that the addition of MXene to less conductive oxides eliminates the need for conductive carbon additives and binders, leads to a larger amount of charge stored, and increases redox capacity at higher rates. In addition, MXene encapsulated α‐MoO 3 showed improved electrochemical stability, which was attributed to the suppressed dissolution of α‐MoO 3 . The work suggests that oxide/MXene hybrids are promising for energy storage.
ISSN:2575-0356
2575-0356
DOI:10.1002/eem2.12516