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  4. Combined Computational and Experimental Study on the Influence of Surface Chemistry of Carbon-Based Electrodes on Electrode-Electrolyte Interactions in Supercapacitors
 
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Combined Computational and Experimental Study on the Influence of Surface Chemistry of Carbon-Based Electrodes on Electrode-Electrolyte Interactions in Supercapacitors

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2019-02-07
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Schweizer, Sabine  
Landwehr, Johannes  
Etzold, Bastian J.M.  
Meißner, Robert Horst  orcid-logo
Amkreutz, Marc  
Schiffels, Peter  
Hill, Jörg-Rüdiger  
Institut
Kunststoffe und Verbundwerkstoffe M-11  
Molekulardynamische Simulation weicher Materie M-EXK2  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/2159
Journal
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C  
Volume
123
Issue
5
Start Page
2716
End Page
2727
Citation
Journal of Physical Chemistry C 5 (123): 2716-2727 (2019-02-07)
Publisher DOI
10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b07617
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85061337882
Supercapacitors are regarded as a promising technology for novel, powerful energy-storage systems. The mechanism of energy storage in these capacitors is not fully understood yet because of the complex molecular mechanisms at the atomistic scale. Exploring the processes at the nanoscale provides necessary fundamental and thorough insights for improving the performance of such devices. In this work, we present a combined computational and experimental study on electrode-electrolyte interactions in electric double-layer capacitors. The influence of pore size and surface chemistry of carbon-based electrode material on interactions with the electrolyte has been investigated for an organic and inorganic electrolyte using density functional theory calculations. In addition, solvent effects on the interaction strength have been systematically explored. We found that experimentally determined effects of pore confinement can be linked with calculated interaction energies, providing a suitable descriptor for virtual prescreening approaches. Our results show that the pore size significantly affects the interaction quality with the electrolyte. This effect and the influence of chemical functionalization have a stronger impact on the interaction with anions than with cations. Moreover, our studies indicate that solvent effects are especially important for surface functional groups that allow for hydrogen bonding. Overall, our results provide relevant information on how structural and electronic effects affect confinement, wettability, and mobility of electrolyte molecules, which is important for boosting and tuning the performance of supercapacitors.
DDC Class
600: Technology
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