4.7 Article

Photothermal supercapacitors at-40 °C based on bifunctional TiN electrodes

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 423, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2021.130162

Keywords

Self-heating; Titanium nitride; Photothermal effect; Supercapacitors; Low temperature

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51772116, 51972132]
  2. Program for HUST Academic Frontier Youth Team [2016QYTD04]

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A new photothermal-assisted supercapacitor using commercially available TiN nanocrystals as an electrode material has been developed, showing high charge-storage capacity and operability at harsh low-temperature conditions. The device benefits from broad light absorption and high photothermal conversion efficiency of bifunctional TiN, and achieves considerable temperature rise even in open atmospheric environment. Furthermore, the as-fabricated device exhibits stable and reversible charge-storage capability, and the energy density is significantly improved at low temperatures.
Electrode materials are the key to electrochemical energy storage devices like supercapacitors. However, current materials can hardly meet the charge-storage capacity and/or operability requirements of practical scenarios in harsh low-temperature conditions. Here we report the advancement in photothermal-assisted supercapacitors operable at -40 degrees C using an electrochemically active and photothermal electrode material of commercially available TiN nanocrystals. Bifunctional TiN shows broad light absorption (>98%) in the whole solar spectrum and high photothermal conversion efficiency (62.5%). Even in an open atmospheric environment, the photochemical effect boosts the device with a considerable temperature rise from -36.6 degrees C to -10.8 degrees C under 1 solar illumination. Meanwhile, the as-fabricated device exhibits highly stable and reversible charge-storage capability. Its capacitance is enhanced by 38.0% at 5 mV s-1 at -40 degrees C, achieving 70.9% of the capacitance at 25 degrees C. The energy density is improved by 81.1% at 140 mW cm-2 at -40 degrees C, reaching 59.3% of the capacitance at 25 degrees C. The route for preparing TiN inks and fabricating screen-printed devices is simple and cheap, which is suitable for industrial mass production. The self-heating integration approach provides a promising strategy for designing new functionalized energy-storage devices with low temperature resistant features.

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