1.8 v aqueous symmetric carbon-based supercapacitors with agarose-bound activated carbons in an acidic electrolyte

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Abstract

The specific energy of an aqueous carbon supercapacitor is generally small, resulting mainly from a narrow potential window of aqueous electrolytes. Here, we introduced agarose, an ecologically compatible polymer, as a novel binder to fabricate an activated carbon supercapacitor, enabling a wider potential window attributed to a high overpotential of the hydrogen-evolution reaction (HER) of agarose-bound activated carbons in sulfuric acid. Assembled symmetric aqueous cells can be galvanostatically cycled up to 1.8 V, attaining an enhanced energy density of 13.5 W h/kg (9.5 µW h/cm2 ) at 450 W/kg (315 µW/cm2 ). Furthermore, a great cycling behavior was obtained, with a 94.2% retention of capacitance after 10,000 cycles at 2 A/g. This work might guide the design of an alternative material for high-energy aqueous supercapacitors.

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Lai, C. C., Hsu, F. H., Hsu, S. Y., Deng, M. J., Lu, K. T., & Chen, J. M. (2021). 1.8 v aqueous symmetric carbon-based supercapacitors with agarose-bound activated carbons in an acidic electrolyte. Nanomaterials, 11(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11071731

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