Energy Storage Mechanism in Supercapacitors with Porous Graphdiynes: Effects of Pore Topology and Electrode Metallicity

Author:

Mo Tangming12ORCID,Wang Zhenxiang1ORCID,Zeng Liang1,Chen Ming1,Kornyshev Alexei A.3ORCID,Zhang Mingcai4,Zhao Yongqing4,Feng Guang1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Coal Combustion School of Energy and Power Engineering Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) Wuhan 430074 China

2. School of Mechanical Engineering Guangxi University Nanning Guangxi 530004 China

3. Department of Chemistry Imperial College London Molecular Sciences Research Hub White City Campus London W12 0BZ UK

4. State Key Laboratory of Applied Organic Chemistry Laboratory of Special Function Materials and Structure Design of the Ministry of Education College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Lanzhou University Lanzhou 730000 China

Abstract

AbstractPorous graphdiynes are a new class of porous 2D materials with tunable electronic structures and various pore structures. They have potential applications as well‐defined nanostructured electrodes and can provide platforms for understanding energy storage mechanisms underlying supercapacitors. Herein, the effect of stacking structure and metallicity on energy storage with such electrodes is investigated. Simulations reveal that supercapacitors based on porous graphdiynes of AB stacking structure can achieve both higher double‐layer capacitance and ionic conductivity than AA stacking. This phenomenon is ascribed to more intense image forces in AB stacking, leading to a breakdown of ionic ordering and the formation of effective “free ions”. Macroscale analysis shows that doped porous graphdiynes can deliver outstanding gravimetric and volumetric energy and power densities due to their enhanced quantum capacitance. These findings pave the way for designing high‐performance supercapacitors by regulating pore topology and metallicity of electrode materials.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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