A Novel Phase-Transformation Activation Process toward Ni-Mn-O Nanoprism Arrays for 2.4 V Ultrahigh-Voltage Aqueous Supercapacitors.
Wenhua ZuoChaoyue XiePan XuYuanyuan LiJin-Ping LiuPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2017)
One of the key challenges of aqueous supercapacitors is the relatively low voltage (0.8-2.0 V), which significantly limits the energy density and feasibility of practical applications of the device. Herein, this study reports a novel Ni-Mn-O solid-solution cathode to widen the supercapacitor device voltage, which can potentially suppress the oxygen evolution reaction and thus be operated stably within a quite wide potential window of 0-1.4 V (vs saturated calomel electrode) after a simple but unique phase-transformation electrochemical activation. The solid-solution structure is designed with an ordered array architecture and in situ nanocarbon modification to promote the charge/mass transfer kinetics. By paring with commercial activated carbon anode, an ultrahigh voltage asymmetric supercapacitor in neutral aqueous LiCl electrolyte is assembled (2.4 V; among the highest for single-cell supercapacitors). Moreover, by using a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)-LiCl electrolyte, a 2.4 V hydrogel supercapacitor is further developed with an excellent Coulombic efficiency, good rate capability, and remarkable cycle life (>5000 cycles; 95.5% capacity retention). Only one cell can power the light-emitting diode indicator brightly. The resulting maximum volumetric energy density is 4.72 mWh cm-3 , which is much superior to previous thin-film manganese-oxide-based supercapacitors and even battery-supercapacitor hybrid devices.
Keyphrases
- solid state
- reduced graphene oxide
- ionic liquid
- single cell
- gold nanoparticles
- ion batteries
- metal organic framework
- transition metal
- light emitting
- room temperature
- rna seq
- high throughput
- drug delivery
- solar cells
- high density
- stem cells
- alcohol consumption
- human health
- electron transfer
- molecularly imprinted
- risk assessment
- wound healing