Synergistic interaction between redox-active electrolyte and binder-free functionalized carbon for ultrahigh supercapacitor performance

Development of supercapacitors with high-energy density and high-power density is a tremendous challenge. Although the use of conductive carbon materials is promising, other methods are needed to reach high cyclability, which cannot be achieved by fully utilizing the surface-oxygen redox reactions o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2013-12, Vol.4 (1), p.2923-2923, Article 2923
Hauptverfasser: Mai, Li-Qiang, Minhas-Khan, Aamir, Tian, Xiaocong, Hercule, Kalele Mulonda, Zhao, Yun-Long, Lin, Xu, Xu, Xu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Development of supercapacitors with high-energy density and high-power density is a tremendous challenge. Although the use of conductive carbon materials is promising, other methods are needed to reach high cyclability, which cannot be achieved by fully utilizing the surface-oxygen redox reactions of carbon. Here we introduce an effective strategy that utilizes Cu 2+ reduction with carbon-oxygen surface groups of the binder-free electrode in a new redox-active electrolyte. We report a 10-fold increase in the voltammetric capacitance (4,700 F g −1 ) compared with conventional electrolyte. We measured galvanostatic capacitances of 1,335 F g −1 with a retention of 99.4% after 5,000 cycles at 60 A g −1 in a three-electrode cell and 1,010 F g −1 in a two-electrode cell. This improvement is attributed to the synergistic effects between surface-oxygen molecules and electrolyte ions as well as the low charge transfer resistance (0.04 Ω) of the binder-free porous electrode. Our strategy provides a versatile method for designing new energy storage devices and is promising for the development of high-performance supercapacitors for large-scale applications. Using redox-active electrolytes can promote faradaic reactions in supercapactors. Mai et al. report a copper chloride solution electrolyte, which, when combined with a surface-functionalized carbon-based binder-free electrode, exhibits ultrahigh supercapacitor performance.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms3923