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Optimizing Ion Pathway in Titanium Carbide MXene for Practical High‐Rate Supercapacitor

Jun Tang, Tyler S. Mathis, Xiongwei Zhong, Xu Xiao, Hao Wang, Mark Anayee, Feng Pan, Baomin Xu, Yury Gogotsi

2020Advanced Energy Materials272 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The lengthened ion pathway in restacked 2D materials greatly limits the electrochemical performance of practically dense film electrodes (mass loading >10 mg cm −2 ). Typical strategies such as the insertion of nanomaterials and 3D‐structure design is expected to reduce the volumetric capacitance of Ti 3 C 2 T x electrodes, diminishing the dominating advantage of Ti 3 C 2 T x over other electrode materials. Here, a novel, facile, and controllable H 2 SO 4 oxidation method is developed for alleviating the restacking issue of Ti 3 C 2 T x film with few electrochemically inactive side‐products such as TiO 2 . A hierarchical ion path “highway” in Ti 3 C 2 T x film is fabricated with porous structure, atomic‐level increased interlayer spacing, and reduced flake size (through probe‐sonication). As a result, ultra‐high rate performance is obtained with high volumetric capacitance. For a ≈1.1 µm thick Ti 3 C 2 T x film, capacitance retention of 64% is obtained (208 F g −1 /756 F cm −3 ) when the scan rate is increased from 5 to 10,000 mV s −1 . Even at higher mass loadings exceeding 12 mg cm −2 (48 µm thickness), the rate capability is still comparable to unoptimized Ti 3 C 2 T x electrodes with low mass loading (1 mg cm −2 ). Consequently, a high areal capacitance of ≈3.2 F cm −2 is achieved for pathway‐optimized thick Ti 3 C 2 T x film, which is of great significance for practical applications.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceCapacitanceSupercapacitorElectrodeHorizontal scan rateElectrochemistryTitanium carbideTitaniumIonHigh massAnalytical Chemistry (journal)NanotechnologyComposite materialChemical engineeringCarbideCyclic voltammetryMetallurgyPhysical chemistryChemistryEngineeringPhysicsChromatographyAstrophysicsQuantum mechanicsMXene and MAX Phase MaterialsFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices2D Materials and Applications