posted on 2021-02-18, 13:03authored byYongcheng Xiao, Dong He, Weimin Peng, Songbo Chen, Jing Liu, Huqiang Chen, Shixuan Xin, Yongxiao Bai
As
a tradeoff between supercapacitors and batteries, lithium-ion
capacitors (LICs) are designed to deliver high energy density, high
power density, and long cycling stability. Owing to the different
energy storage mechanisms of capacitor-type cathodes and battery-type
anodes, engineering and fabricating LICs with excellent energy density
and power density remains a challenge. Herein, to alleviate the mismatch
between the anode and cathode, we ingeniously designed a graphene
with oxidized-polydopamine coating (LG@DA1) and N,P codoped porous
foam structure activated carbon (CPC750) as the battery-type anode
and capacitor-type cathode, respectively. Using oxidized-polydopamine
to stabilize the structure of graphene, increase layer spacing, and
modify the surface chemical property, the LG@DA1 anode delivers a
maximum capacity of 1100 mAh g–1 as well as good
cycling stability. With N,P codoping and a porous foam structure,
the CPC750 cathode exhibits a large effective specific surface area
and a high specific capacity of 87.5 mAh g–1. In
specific, the present LG@DA1//CPC750 LIC showcases a high energy density
of 170.6 Wh kg–1 and superior capacity retention
of 93.5% after 2000 cycles. The success of the present LIC can be
attributed to the structural stability design, surface chemistry regulation,
and enhanced utilization of effective active sites of the anode and
cathode; thus, this strategy can be applied to improve the performance
of LICs.