Defect structures in supercapacitor electrodes: non-oxide 2D materials and metal oxides

Abstract

This review analyzes how crystallographic and interfacial defects govern charge storage in supercapacitor electrodes by shaping electronic structure, charge/ion transport, and redox kinetics. We explicitly decouple chemistry (oxide vs. non-oxide) from dimensionality (2D vs. 3D) to avoid conflation, treating non-oxide 2D materials and metal oxides as orthogonal categories. Across point defects, edge/termination states, and lattice disorder, we show how defect-driven mixed valence, oxygen-vacancy formation, and small-polaron conduction set the density and accessibility of (pseudo)capacitive sites and control the trade-offs between rate capability, stability, and safety. A concise framework connects defect type and distribution to measurable electrochemical responses (capacitance, kinetics, cyclability), supported by multimodal spectroscopy and in situ/operando methods that quantify defect populations under working conditions. Finally, we distill practical design rules—vacancy/termination control, aliovalent doping, and phase/strain engineering—that translate defect chemistry into targeted performance gains, providing a unifying roadmap for defect-engineered supercapacitor electrodes.

Graphical abstract: Defect structures in supercapacitor electrodes: non-oxide 2D materials and metal oxides

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
10 Jun 2025
Accepted
17 Sep 2025
First published
22 Sep 2025

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Advance Article

Defect structures in supercapacitor electrodes: non-oxide 2D materials and metal oxides

A. Güngör, A. U. Ammar, A. M. Rostas and E. Erdem, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5TA04716A

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