Artemov, VasilyVasilyArtemovBabiy, SvetlanaSvetlanaBabiyTeng, YunfeiYunfeiTengMa, JiamingJiamingMaRyzhov, AlexanderAlexanderRyzhovChen, HengHengChenNavrátilová, LucieLucieNavrátilováBoureau, VictorVictorBoureauSchouwink, PascalPascalSchouwinkLiseanskaia, MariiaMariiaLiseanskaiaHuber, PatrickPatrickHuberBrushett, FikileFikileBrushettLaloui, LyesseLyesseLalouiTagliabue, GiuliaGiuliaTagliabueRadenovic, AleksandraAleksandraRadenovic2026-06-092026-06-092026-06-05Nature Communications 17: 5014 (2026)https://hdl.handle.net/11420/63397Water confined to channels one nanometer thick exhibits electrochemical behavior distinct from bulk water, including enhanced protonic conductivity and large dielectric anisotropy. Here, we exploit these characteristics to design a scalable electrochemical energy storage system-a “blue capacitor”-constructed entirely from naturally abundant materials. By assembling layered clays and conductive graphene, we produce 1-nm-thick channels in which confined water acts as the sole electrolyte. We systematically study different clay types, the electrode composition, and separator thickness using complementary physicochemical and electrochemical techniques. The device operates stably up to 1.6 ± 0.1 V, achieves specific capacitances of 40 F g−1, 97 ± 2% coulombic efficiency, and stable performance over more than 60,000 charge-discharge cycles at a voltage window of 1 V and a scan rate of 10 mA. Structural and dynamic analyses validate the device architecture, water purity, and proton transport in the nanopores. These results demonstrate that nanoconfined water can function as an electrolyte in a macroscopic electrochemical device, providing a platform for exploring sustainable aqueous energy storage systems.en2041-1723Nature communications2026Nature Publishing Group UKhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Technology::621: Applied Physics::621.3: Electrical Engineering, Electronic EngineeringNatural Sciences and Mathematics::541: Physical; Theoretical::541.3: Physical Chemistry::541.37: ElectrochemistryAll-water supercapacitor enabled by 1-nm clay channelsJournal Article2026-06-06https://doi.org/10.15480/882.1727310.1038/s41467-026-73924-110.15480/882.17273