4.8 Article

A superhydrophilic nanoglue for stabilizing metal hydroxides onto carbon materials for high-energy and ultralong-life asymmetric supercapacitors

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages 1958-1965

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7ee01040k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [21522601, U1508201]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [DUT16ZD217]
  3. National Key Research Development Program of China [2016YFB0101201]

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Coupling electroactive species with carbon supports to fabricate hybrid electrodes holds promise for high-performance supercapacitors. Nevertheless, the poor compatibility and weak bonding between carbon substrates and electroactive species remain a bottleneck to be tackled. Herein, we present a superhydrophilic nanoglue strategy for stabilizing NiCo-layered double hydroxide (NiCo-LDH) nanosheets on inert carbon cloth (CC) by employing a nitrogen-doped (N-doped) carbon layer as the structure/interface coupling bridge to make hybrids (denoted as CC-NC-LDH) for supercapacitors. Such a nanoglue on a CC substrate results in the formation of a superhydrophilic surface/interface, which is favorable for the robust and uniform growth of NiCo-LDH on the CC, and helps effectively tune the electronic structural states and results in a strong coupling interaction between the CC and NiCo-LDH nanosheets. Benefiting from these integrated merits, asymmetric supercapacitors fabricated with the CC-NC-LDH hybrids as the positive electrode and typical activated carbon as the negative electrode deliver a high energy density of 69.7 W h kg(-1) at a power density of 0.8 kW kg(-1), with an ultra-low average capacitance fade rate of similar to 0.00065% per cycle within 20 000 cycles at a current density of 10 A g(-1). This superhydrophilic nanoglue strategy can also be extended to assemble other kinds of active species on different inert substrates, and holds the potential for creating efficient and robust electrode materials for energy-related devices.

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