An Electrochemical Capacitor with Applicable Energy
Density of 7.4 Wh/kg at Average Power Density of 3000 W/kg
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Abstract
Electrochemical
capacitors represent a new class of charge storage devices that can
simultaneously achieve high energy density and high power density.
Previous reports have been primarily focused on the development of
high performance capacitor electrodes. Although these electrodes have achieved excellent specific capacitance
based on per unit mass of active materials, the gravimetric energy
densities calculated based on the weight of entire capacitor device
were fairly small. This is mainly due to the large mass ratio between
current collector and active material. We aimed to address this issue
by a 2-fold approach of minimizing the mass of current collector and
increasing the electrode performance. Here we report an electrochemical
capacitor using 3D graphene hollow structure as current collector,
vanadium sulfide and manganese oxide as anode and cathode materials,
respectively. 3D graphene hollow structure provides a lightweight
and highly conductive scaffold for deposition of pseudocapacitive
materials. The device achieves an excellent active material ratio
of 24%. Significantly, it delivers a remarkable energy density of
7.4 Wh/kg (based on the weight of entire device) at the average power
density of 3000 W/kg. This is the highest gravimetric energy density
reported for asymmetric electrochemical capacitors at such a high
power density