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Enhanced Charge Storage Mechanism and Long-Term Cycling Stability in Diamondized Titania Nanocomposite Supercapacitors Operating in Aqueous Electrolytes

MetadataDetails
Publication Date2020-07-01
JournalThe Journal of Physical Chemistry C
AuthorsRobert Bogdanowicz, Anna Dettlaff, Franciszek Skiba, Konrad Trzciński, Mariusz Szkoda
InstitutionsTechnical University of Liberec, Polish Academy of Sciences
Citations13

The long cycle life stability and high energy density are limiting broader feasible applications of supercapacitors (SCs). The novel diamondized titania nanocomposite SCs deliver high power and energy densities along with high capacitance retention rates. SC electrodes were fabricated utilizing a combination of Ti anodization followed by chemical vapor deposition resulting in the simultaneous growth of the complex boron-doped diamond (BDD)/TiC interface. The first-principles simulations along with extended molecular investigations conducted by bright-field transmission electron microscopy and high resolution-scanning electron microscopy revealed that capacitive phenomena are delivered by nanoporous, multifaceted, and substoichiometric TiC, forming clusters at the lateral surfaces of titania nanotubes. Next, TiC mechanical stability and effective charge transfer electrode-electrolyte are efficiently provided by the highly conductive, although discontinuous BDD overlayer. The assembled two-electrode SC devices exhibited capacitances of 15 mF cm-2, which were stable at 0.1 V s-1 scan rate in various neutral aqueous electrolytes. The composite TiO2 nanotube arrays-BDD SCs showed outstanding long-term cycling stability with a capacitance retention of 93% after 100,000 chronopotentiometry cycles verified by postaging cyclic voltammetry tests. In parallel, the energy and power density calculated at a current density of 3 A g-1 achieved levels as high as 14.74 W h kg-1 and 24.68 kW kg-1, revealing the superior performance of the assembled devices compared to recently reported SCs.