Influence of Surface Oxidation on Ion Dynamics and Capacitance in Porous and Nonporous Carbon Electrodes
Article 2016 en
Authors
BD
Boris Dyatkin
YZ
Yu Zhang
EM
Eugene Mamontov
Abstract
1 min read
We investigate the influence of surface chemistry and ion confinement on capacitance and electrosorption dynamics of room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) in supercapacitors. Using air oxidation and vacuum annealing, we produced defunctionalized and oxygen-rich surfaces of carbide-derived carbons (CDCs) and graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs). While oxidized surfaces of porous CDCs improve capacitance and rate handling abilities of ions, defunctionalized nonporous GNPs improve charge storage densities on planar electrodes. Quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS) and inelastic neutron scattering (INS) probed the structure, dynamics, and orientation of RTIL ions confined in divergently functionalized pores. Oxidized, ionophilic surfaces draw ions closer to pore surfaces and enhance potential-driven ion transport during electrosorption. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations corroborated experimental data and demonstrated the significance of surface functional groups on ion orientations, accumulation densities, and capacitance.
Naresh C. Osti, Boris Dyatkin, Alejandro Gallegos, David Voneshen, Jong K. Keum, Kenneth C. Littrell, Pengfei Zhang, Sheng Dai, Jianzhong Wu, Yury Gogotsi, Eugene Mamontov
Naresh C. Osti, Boris Dyatkin, Matthew W. Thompson, Felix Tiet, Pengfei Zhang, Sheng Dai, Madhusudan Tyagi, Peter T. Cummings, Yury Gogotsi, David J. Wesolowski, Eugene Mamontov
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