z-logo
Premium
Two‐Dimensional Materials for High‐Energy Solid‐State Asymmetric Pseudocapacitors with High Mass Loadings
Author(s) -
Chodankar Nilesh R.,
Patil Swati J.,
Rama Raju Ganji Seeta,
Lee Dong Weon,
Dubal Deepak P.,
Huh Yun Suk,
Han YoungKyu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chemsuschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.412
H-Index - 157
eISSN - 1864-564X
pISSN - 1864-5631
DOI - 10.1002/cssc.201902339
Subject(s) - pseudocapacitor , supercapacitor , materials science , capacitance , electrode , electrochemistry , power density , ion , nanotechnology , chemical engineering , high mass , chemistry , power (physics) , thermodynamics , physics , organic chemistry , astrophysics , engineering
A porous nanostructure and high mass loading are crucial for a pseudocapacitor to achieve a good electrochemical performance. Although pseudocapacitive materials, such as MnO 2 and MoS 2 , with record capacitances close to their theoretical values have been realized, the achieved capacitances are possible only when the electrode mass loading is less than 1 mg cm −2 . Increasing the mass loading affects the capacitance as electron conduction and ion diffusion become sluggish. Achieving fast ion and electron transport at high mass loadings through all active sites remains a challenge for high‐mass‐loading electrodes. In this study, 2D MnO 2 nanosheets supported on carbon fibers (MnO 2 @CF) as well as MoS 2 @CF with high mass loadings (6.6 and 7.2 mg cm −2 , respectively) were used in a high‐energy pseudocapacitor. These hierarchical 2D nanosheets yielded outstanding areal capacitances of 1187 and 495 mF cm −2 at high current densities with excellent cycling stabilities. A pliable pseudocapacitive solid‐state asymmetric supercapacitor was designed using MnO 2 @CF and MoS 2 @CF as the positive and negative electrodes, respectively, with a high mass loading of 14.2 mg cm −2 . The assembled solid‐state asymmetric cell had an energy density of 2.305 mWh cm −3 at a power density of 50 mW cm −3 and a capacitance retention of 92.25 % over 11 000 cycles and a very small diffusion resistance (1.72 Ω s −1/2 ). Thus, it is superior to most state‐of‐the‐art reported pseudocapacitors. The rationally designed nanostructured electrodes with high mass loading are likely to open up new opportunities for the development of a supercapacitor device capable of supplying higher energy and power.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom