Recent progress of cathode materials for aqueous zinc-ion capacitors: Carbon-based materials and beyond
Review article, 2021

As an emerging multivalent-ion-based energy storage device, aqueous zinc-ion capacitors (AZICs) combine the merits of zinc-ion batteries with high energy density, excellent safety, low cost and environmental friendliness, and the advantages of supercapacitors with high power density and superior cycling performance. Therefore, AZICs have been considered as a new promising electrochemical energy storage system. Though great progress of AZICs has been made recently, they are still in the infant stage and face many challenges. Specially, the unsatisfactory energy density needs to be improved to realize their practical applications, which calls for high-capacity cathode materials. In this review, after a brief introduction of progress and mechanism for AZICs, we provide a systematical overview of the latest advances in the state-of-art cathode materials. The synthesis route, structure and morphology, electrochemical performance, energy storage mechanism as well as the merits and drawbacks of various cathode materials are comprehensively compared and discussed. Finally, a summary and outlook of the challenges and future perspectives of AZICs were presented. With these, this review might offer some guidance for the future design of dedicated novel cathode materials to realize the great potential of AZICs.

Zinc-ion capacitor

Nano carbon

Hybrid capacitor

Supercapacitor

Cathode material

Author

Dong Sui

Luoyang Normal University

Manman Wu

Nankai University

Kaiyuan Shi

Sun Yat-Sen University

Changle Li

Luoyang Normal University

Junwei Lang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Yanliang Yang

Luoyang Normal University

Xiaoyan Zhang

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Xingbin Yan

Sun Yat-Sen University

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Yongsheng Chen

Nankai University

Carbon

0008-6223 (ISSN)

Vol. 185 126-151

Harnessing Covalent Chemistry on Two-dimensional Black Phosphorus Nanosheets

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2020-04903), 2021-01-01 -- 2024-12-31.

Subject Categories

Other Engineering and Technologies not elsewhere specified

Materials Chemistry

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1016/j.carbon.2021.08.084

More information

Latest update

9/28/2021