| Literature DB >> 34138127 |
Yongzheng Fang1, Yingying Zhang1, Chenxu Miao1, Kai Zhu2, Yong Chen3, Fei Du4, Jinling Yin1, Ke Ye1, Kui Cheng1, Jun Yan1, Guiling Wang1, Dianxue Cao5.
Abstract
Sodium ion batteries and capacitors have demonstrated their potential applications for next-generation low-cost energy storage devices. These devices's rate ability is determined by the fast sodium ion storage behavior in electrode materials. Herein, a defective TiO2@reduced graphene oxide (M-TiO2@rGO) self-supporting foam electrode is constructed via a facile MXene decomposition and graphene oxide self-assembling process. The employment of the MXene parent phase exhibits distinctive advantages, enabling defect engineering, nanoengineering, and fluorine-doped metal oxides. As a result, the M-TiO2@rGO electrode shows a pseudocapacitance-dominated hybrid sodium storage mechanism. The pseudocapacitance-dominated process leads to high capacity, remarkable rate ability, and superior cycling performance. Significantly, an M-TiO2@rGO//Na3V2(PO4)3 sodium full cell and an M-TiO2@rGO//HPAC sodium ion capacitor are fabricated to demonstrate the promising application of M-TiO2@rGO. The sodium ion battery presents a capacity of 177.1 mAh g-1 at 500 mA g-1 and capacity retention of 74% after 200 cycles. The sodium ion capacitor delivers a maximum energy density of 101.2 Wh kg-1 and a maximum power density of 10,103.7 W kg-1. At 1.0 A g-1, it displays an energy retention of 84.7% after 10,000 cycles.Entities:
Keywords: MXene–Ti2CTx; Self-supporting; Sodium ion battery and capacitor; TiO2 anodes; Vacancy oxygen
Year: 2020 PMID: 34138127 DOI: 10.1007/s40820-020-00471-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomicro Lett ISSN: 2150-5551