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Spontaneously Forming Oxide Layer of High Entropy Alloy Nanoparticles Deposited on Porous Carbons for Supercapacitors
Author(s) -
Shen Enhui,
Song Xuehua,
Chen Qibin,
Zheng Mengmeng,
Bian Jianqing,
Liu Honglai
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
chemelectrochem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.182
H-Index - 59
ISSN - 2196-0216
DOI - 10.1002/celc.202001289
Subject(s) - materials science , supercapacitor , pseudocapacitance , capacitance , chemical engineering , oxide , nanoparticle , alloy , separator (oil production) , adsorption , nanotechnology , composite material , electrode , metallurgy , chemistry , engineering , physics , organic chemistry , thermodynamics
High‐entropy alloy nanoparticles with a thin metal oxide layer, deposited onto hypercrosslinked polymer‐based carbon (HCPC), were synthesized through the adsorption of five metal ions in the hypercrosslinked polymers and subsequent in situ reduction of such ions (Fe 2+ , Co 2+ , Ni 2+ , Cu 2+ and Sn 2+ ), followed by a carbonization process. The as‐prepared composites exhibit an excellent specific capacitance (495.4 F/g at 0.5 A/g in 1 M KOH), a superior cycling stability (94.7 % of initial capacitance after 15000 cycles at 10 A/g), and ultrafast charge transport kinetics (88.9 % fast kinetic capacitance at 200 mV/s). These excellent electrochemical behaviors are attributed to the pseudocapacitance of the metal oxide layer spontaneously formed on the outermost surface of the composite, having a thickness at the nanometer scale. Such findings suggest that this simple strategy, combining multimetallic nanoparticles with porous carbon materials, has promising potential to improve specific capacitance and paves the way to develop both the preparation of high‐entropy alloys and supercapacitors with improved performance.

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