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New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors

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New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors. / Forse, Alexander C.; Merlet, Celine; Griffin, John Matthew et al.
In: Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol. 138, No. 18, 11.05.2016, p. 5731-5744.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Forse, AC, Merlet, C, Griffin, JM & Grey, CP 2016, 'New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors', Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 138, no. 18, pp. 5731-5744. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b02115

APA

Forse, A. C., Merlet, C., Griffin, J. M., & Grey, C. P. (2016). New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 138(18), 5731-5744. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b02115

Vancouver

Forse AC, Merlet C, Griffin JM, Grey CP. New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 2016 May 11;138(18):5731-5744. Epub 2016 Mar 31. doi: 10.1021/jacs.6b02115

Author

Forse, Alexander C. ; Merlet, Celine ; Griffin, John Matthew et al. / New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors. In: Journal of the American Chemical Society. 2016 ; Vol. 138, No. 18. pp. 5731-5744.

Bibtex

@article{2e7fb1d450ef4ae58de410a0bf065129,
title = "New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors",
abstract = "Supercapacitors (or electric double-layer capacitors) are high-power energy storage devices that store charge at the interface between porous carbon electrodes and an electrolyte solution. These devices are already employed in heavy electric vehicles and electronic devices, and can complement batteries in a more sustainable future. Their widespread application could be facilitated by the development of devices that can store more energy, without compromising their fast charging and discharging times. In situ characterization methods and computational modeling techniques have recently been developed to study the molecular mechanisms of charge storage, with the hope that better devices can be rationally designed. In this Perspective, we bring together recent findings from a range of experimental and computational studies to give a detailed picture of the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors. Nuclear magnetic resonance experiments and molecular dynamics simulations have revealed that the electrode pores contain a considerable number of ions in the absence of an applied charging potential. Experiments and computer simulations have shown that different charging mechanisms can then operate when a potential is applied, going beyond the traditional view of charging by counter-ion adsorption. It is shown that charging almost always involves ion exchange (swapping of co-ions for counter-ions), and rarely occurs by counter-ion adsorption alone. We introduce a charging mechanism parameter that quantifies the mechanism and allows comparisons between different systems. The mechanism is found to depend strongly on the polarization of the electrode, and the choice of the electrolyte and electrode materials. In light of these advances we identify new directions for supercapacitor research. Further experimental and computational work is needed to explain the factors that control supercapacitor charging mechanisms, and to establish the links between mechanisms and performance. Increased understanding and control of charging mechanisms should lead to new strategies for developing next-generation supercapacitors with improved performances.",
keywords = "QUARTZ-CRYSTAL MICROBALANCE, DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY, ELECTRICAL DOUBLE-LAYER, NANOPOROUS CARBON ELECTRODES, NUCLEAR-MAGNETIC-RESONANCE, ANGLE NEUTRON-SCATTERING, CARBIDE-DERIVED CARBON, PORE-SIZE ANALYSIS, X-RAY-SCATTERING, SOLID-STATE NMR",
author = "Forse, {Alexander C.} and Celine Merlet and Griffin, {John Matthew} and Grey, {Clare P.}",
year = "2016",
month = may,
day = "11",
doi = "10.1021/jacs.6b02115",
language = "English",
volume = "138",
pages = "5731--5744",
journal = "Journal of the American Chemical Society",
issn = "0002-7863",
publisher = "AMER CHEMICAL SOC",
number = "18",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - New perspectives on the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors

AU - Forse, Alexander C.

AU - Merlet, Celine

AU - Griffin, John Matthew

AU - Grey, Clare P.

PY - 2016/5/11

Y1 - 2016/5/11

N2 - Supercapacitors (or electric double-layer capacitors) are high-power energy storage devices that store charge at the interface between porous carbon electrodes and an electrolyte solution. These devices are already employed in heavy electric vehicles and electronic devices, and can complement batteries in a more sustainable future. Their widespread application could be facilitated by the development of devices that can store more energy, without compromising their fast charging and discharging times. In situ characterization methods and computational modeling techniques have recently been developed to study the molecular mechanisms of charge storage, with the hope that better devices can be rationally designed. In this Perspective, we bring together recent findings from a range of experimental and computational studies to give a detailed picture of the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors. Nuclear magnetic resonance experiments and molecular dynamics simulations have revealed that the electrode pores contain a considerable number of ions in the absence of an applied charging potential. Experiments and computer simulations have shown that different charging mechanisms can then operate when a potential is applied, going beyond the traditional view of charging by counter-ion adsorption. It is shown that charging almost always involves ion exchange (swapping of co-ions for counter-ions), and rarely occurs by counter-ion adsorption alone. We introduce a charging mechanism parameter that quantifies the mechanism and allows comparisons between different systems. The mechanism is found to depend strongly on the polarization of the electrode, and the choice of the electrolyte and electrode materials. In light of these advances we identify new directions for supercapacitor research. Further experimental and computational work is needed to explain the factors that control supercapacitor charging mechanisms, and to establish the links between mechanisms and performance. Increased understanding and control of charging mechanisms should lead to new strategies for developing next-generation supercapacitors with improved performances.

AB - Supercapacitors (or electric double-layer capacitors) are high-power energy storage devices that store charge at the interface between porous carbon electrodes and an electrolyte solution. These devices are already employed in heavy electric vehicles and electronic devices, and can complement batteries in a more sustainable future. Their widespread application could be facilitated by the development of devices that can store more energy, without compromising their fast charging and discharging times. In situ characterization methods and computational modeling techniques have recently been developed to study the molecular mechanisms of charge storage, with the hope that better devices can be rationally designed. In this Perspective, we bring together recent findings from a range of experimental and computational studies to give a detailed picture of the charging mechanisms of supercapacitors. Nuclear magnetic resonance experiments and molecular dynamics simulations have revealed that the electrode pores contain a considerable number of ions in the absence of an applied charging potential. Experiments and computer simulations have shown that different charging mechanisms can then operate when a potential is applied, going beyond the traditional view of charging by counter-ion adsorption. It is shown that charging almost always involves ion exchange (swapping of co-ions for counter-ions), and rarely occurs by counter-ion adsorption alone. We introduce a charging mechanism parameter that quantifies the mechanism and allows comparisons between different systems. The mechanism is found to depend strongly on the polarization of the electrode, and the choice of the electrolyte and electrode materials. In light of these advances we identify new directions for supercapacitor research. Further experimental and computational work is needed to explain the factors that control supercapacitor charging mechanisms, and to establish the links between mechanisms and performance. Increased understanding and control of charging mechanisms should lead to new strategies for developing next-generation supercapacitors with improved performances.

KW - QUARTZ-CRYSTAL MICROBALANCE

KW - DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY

KW - ELECTRICAL DOUBLE-LAYER

KW - NANOPOROUS CARBON ELECTRODES

KW - NUCLEAR-MAGNETIC-RESONANCE

KW - ANGLE NEUTRON-SCATTERING

KW - CARBIDE-DERIVED CARBON

KW - PORE-SIZE ANALYSIS

KW - X-RAY-SCATTERING

KW - SOLID-STATE NMR

U2 - 10.1021/jacs.6b02115

DO - 10.1021/jacs.6b02115

M3 - Journal article

VL - 138

SP - 5731

EP - 5744

JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society

JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society

SN - 0002-7863

IS - 18

ER -