| Literature DB >> 25868870 |
Cao Guan1, Jilei Liu2, Yadong Wang3, Lu Mao1, Zhanxi Fan4, Zexiang Shen2, Hua Zhang4, John Wang1.
Abstract
Supercapacitor with ultrahigh energy density (e.g., comparable with those of rechargeable batteries) and long cycling ability (>50000 cycles) is attractive for the next-generation energy storage devices. The energy density of carbonaceous material electrodes can be effectively improved by combining with certain metal oxides/hydroxides, but many at the expenses of power density and long-time cycling stability. To achieve an optimized overall electrochemical performance, rationally designed electrode structures with proper control in metal oxide/carbon are highly desirable. Here we have successfully realized an ultrahigh-energy and long-life supercapacitor anode by developing a hierarchical graphite foam-carbon nanotube framework and coating the surface with a thin layer of iron oxide (GF-CNT@Fe2O3). The full cell of anode based on this structure gives rise to a high energy of ∼74.7 Wh/kg at a power of ∼1400 W/kg, and ∼95.4% of the capacitance can be retained after 50000 cycles of charge-discharge. These performance features are superior among those reported for metal oxide based supercapacitors, making it a promising candidate for the next generation of high-performance electrochemical energy storage.Entities:
Keywords: atomic layer deposition; cycling stability; energy density; metal oxide; supercapacitor anode
Year: 2015 PMID: 25868870 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b00582
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881