High Mass Loading MnO2 with Hierarchical Nanostructures for Supercapacitors.
Zi-Hang HuangYu SongDong-Yang FengZhen SunXiaoqi SunXiao-Xia LiuPublished in: ACS nano (2018)
Metal oxides have attracted renewed interest as promising electrode materials for high energy density supercapacitors. However, the electrochemical performance of metal oxide materials deteriorates significantly with the increase of mass loading due to their moderate electronic and ionic conductivities. This limits their practical energy. Herein, we perform a morphology and phase-controlled electrodeposition of MnO2 with ultrahigh mass loading of 10 mg cm-2 on a carbon cloth substrate to achieve high overall capacitance without sacrificing the electrochemical performance. Under optimum conditions, a hierarchical nanostructured architecture was constructed by interconnection of primary two-dimensional ε-MnO2 nanosheets and secondary one-dimensional α-MnO2 nanorod arrays. The specific hetero-nanostructures ensure facile ionic and electric transport in the entire electrode and maintain the structure stability during cycling. The hierarchically structured MnO2 electrode with high mass loading yields an outstanding areal capacitance of 3.04 F cm-2 (or a specific capacitance of 304 F g-1) at 3 mA cm-2 and an excellent rate capability comparable to those of low mass loading MnO2 electrodes. Finally, the aqueous and all-solid asymmetric supercapacitors (ASCs) assembled with our MnO2 cathode exhibit extremely high volumetric energy densities (8.3 mWh cm-3 at the power density of 0.28 W cm-3 for aqueous ASC and 8.0 mWh cm-3 at 0.65 W cm-3 for all-solid ASC), superior to most state-of-the-art supercapacitors.