| Literature DB >> 28495745 |
Hongtao Sun1, Lin Mei1,2, Junfei Liang3, Zipeng Zhao3, Chain Lee1, Huilong Fei1, Mengning Ding3,4, Jonathan Lau3, Mufan Li1, Chen Wang3, Xu Xu1, Guolin Hao1, Benjamin Papandrea1, Imran Shakir5, Bruce Dunn3,4, Yu Huang3,4, Xiangfeng Duan6,4.
Abstract
Nanostructured materials have shown extraordinary promise for electrochemical energy storage but are usually limited to electrodes with rather low mass loading (~1 milligram per square centimeter) because of the increasing ion diffusion limitations in thicker electrodes. We report the design of a three-dimensional (3D) holey-graphene/niobia (Nb2O5) composite for ultrahigh-rate energy storage at practical levels of mass loading (>10 milligrams per square centimeter). The highly interconnected graphene network in the 3D architecture provides excellent electron transport properties, and its hierarchical porous structure facilitates rapid ion transport. By systematically tailoring the porosity in the holey graphene backbone, charge transport in the composite architecture is optimized to deliver high areal capacity and high-rate capability at high mass loading, which represents a critical step forward toward practical applications.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28495745 DOI: 10.1126/science.aam5852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728