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Carbon Transition-metal Oxide Electrodes: Understanding the Role of Surface Engineering for High Energy Density Supercapacitors

Authors
Tomboc, Gracita M.Tesfaye Gadisa, BekelchaJun, MinkiChaudhari, Nitin K.Kim, HernLee, Kwangyeol
Issue Date
2-6월-2020
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Keywords
Supercapacitor; carbon; transition metal oxide; interface; dual energy storage mechanism
Citation
CHEMISTRY-AN ASIAN JOURNAL, v.15, no.11, pp.1628 - 1647
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
CHEMISTRY-AN ASIAN JOURNAL
Volume
15
Number
11
Start Page
1628
End Page
1647
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/55059
DOI
10.1002/asia.202000324
ISSN
1861-4728
Abstract
Supercapacitors store electrical energy by ion adsorption at the interface of the electrode-electrolyte (electric double layer capacitance, EDLC) or through faradaic process involving direct transfer of electrons via oxidation/reduction reactions at one electrode to the other (pseudocapacitance). The present minireview describes the recent developments and progress of carbon-transition metal oxides (C-TMO) hybrid materials that show great promise as an efficient electrode towards supercapacitors among various material types. The review describes the synthetic methods and electrode preparation techniques along with the changes in the physical and chemical properties of each component in the hybrid materials. The critical factors in deriving both EDLC and pseudocapacitance storage mechanisms are also identified in the hope of pointing to the successful hybrid design principles. For example, a robust carbon-metal oxide interaction was identified as most important in facilitating the charge transfer process and activating high energy storage mechanism, and thus methodologies to establish a strong carbon-metal oxide contact are discussed. Finally, this article concludes with suggestions for the future development of the fabrication of high-performance C-TMO hybrid supercapacitor electrodes.
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