Chao Weia,
Pooi See Leea and
Zhichuan Xu*abc
aSchool of Materials Science and Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798, Singapore. E-mail: xuzc@ntu.edu.sg
bEnergy Research Institute, Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798, Singapore
cSolar Fuels Lab, Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798, Singapore
First published on 8th July 2014
This article presents a comparison of three typical carbon supports, carbon nanotubes (CNTs), reduced graphene oxide (rGO), and acetylene black (AB), with regards to their performance in MnO2 supercapacitors. To exclude the influence of MnO2, uniform-sized MnO2 nanoflakes with a width of ∼50 nm were used to fabricate three MnO2/C composites. The working electrodes were prepared using a consistent procedure to keep all three types of MnO2/C electrodes in the same configuration. The influence of these three carbon supports on capacitive performance and cyclability was studied. In particular, the capacitance contribution of carbon supports was subtracted from the overall capacitance. The contribution from MnO2 was compared among these three types of composites and it was found that rGO could enhance the capacitive performance of MnO2 at slow scan rates. However, MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB exhibited better capacitive performance at high rates and better stability.
Manganese dioxide (MnO2) is a very popular redox capacitor material and the related research has been intensively conducted in the past few years due to the increasing interest in the field of energy storage and conversion.8–10 MnO2 is a promising electrode material for low cost, high energy density supercapacitors because of its abundance in the earth and high specific energy capacity.11,12 MnO2 is also environmental benign due to its low toxicity. Thus it has a great potential to be widely used in energy devices. The theoretical specific capacitance of MnO2 is nearly 1400 F g−1 if all manganese can be involved in the redox reaction (one-electron redox).10 However, to have all manganese participated in the redox reaction is difficult because the redox reaction happens only at the surface region of MnO2. It therefore stimulated a great interest to innovate nanosized MnO2 materials to increase the specific surface area. To date, various methods have been reported to synthesize nanosized MnO2, including co-precipitation,13,14 sol–gel,15 electro-deposition,16,17 hydrothermal,18 and etc. The use of MnO2 nanomaterials has given significant improvements in capacitance.19
However, it should be noted that MnO2 has frequently been combined with carbon support to be used in supercapacitors. This is because MnO2 is not conductive. Various carbon support materials have been used in MnO2 supercapacitors.20,21 The popular carbon supports include carbon nanotubes (CNTs), graphene, carbon black (CB), etc. These carbon supports are usually mixed with MnO2 through different approaches, depending on the synthetic methods of MnO2. For example, some approaches are able to synthesize MnO2/C composites by one step protocol,10 while some others use extra steps to make MnO2/C electrodes.21 It has been well-established in literatures that the carbon supports are influential to enhancing the performance of MnO2 supercapacitors.19,20 However, the various reported MnO2/C composites are made from different approaches and those composites are quite different in composition, morphology, MnO2 materials, mass ratio, and other parameters. As a result, comparisons on the influence of these carbon supports on the MnO2 supercapacitor performance have been rare.
Here we present a rational comparison of three typical carbon supports, carbon nanotubes, graphene, and carbon black, with regards to their performance in MnO2 supercapacitors. We employed uniform-sized MnO2 nanoflakes, which served as a standard active material for three carbon supports. The electrode preparation followed the standard method to keep all three types of MnO2/C electrodes same in configuration. The influence of these three carbon supports on capacitive performance and cyclability was compared.
To investigate the influence of rGO and the other two carbon supports, the capacitance contributions of carbon supports were subtracted from the composite capacitance. The specific capacitances at 5 mV s−1 purely from the contribution of MnO2 are shown in Fig. 2b. It can be seen that in general MnO2 supported on rGO gave higher capacitance than MnO2 supported on the other two carbon supports. CNTs and AB showed similar influence on the performance of supported MnO2. At 20 wt% of MnO2, supported MnO2 exhibited highest capacitance. MnO2 supported on rGO, CNTs, and AB gave specific capacitance of ∼310.2, 292.4, and 274.5 F g−1, respectively. As more MnO2 was made into the composites, the specific capacitance of supported MnO2 dropped. From 20 wt% to 80 wt%, the capacitance drop was nearly in a linear relationship with composition. At 80 wt%, the specific capacitance of supported MnO2 were ∼192.8, ∼163.5, and ∼160.5 F g−1 for MnO2/rGO, MnO2/CNTs, and MnO2/AB, respectively. The capacitance drop for all three types of MnO2/C composites is nearly 50% from 20 to 80 wt% of MnO2. The pure MnO2 supported on nickel foam (100 wt%) gave the lowest specific capacitance. The pure contribution from MnO2 shown in Fig. 2b indicates that carbon supports are essential and influential to the performance of MnO2. If more carbon supports and less MnO2 were made into the composites, higher specific capacitance of supported MnO2 can be achieved.
The trend of specific capacitance of MnO2/C composites at the scan rate of 50 mV s−1 is similar to that at 5 mV s−1. Fig. 2c shows the specific capacitance of three types of composites normalized by the total mass of MnO2 and carbon. Again, MnO2/rGO showed better performance than the other two MnO2/C composites. However, this superiority of rGO is not as remarkable as it showed at 5 mV s−1. For example, MnO2/rGO with 20 wt% MnO2 gave a specific capacitance of ∼71.8 F g−1, which is ∼10 and ∼20 F g−1 more than MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB. As the weight percentage of MnO2 increased to 80 wt%, the capacitance of MnO2/rGO, MnO2/CNTs, and MnO2/AB are quite similar. All are around ∼95 F g−1. On the other hand, after subtracting the capacitance contribution of carbons, the specific capacitance of MnO2 purely from the supported MnO2 exhibited a change. At 50 mV s−1, the highest capacitance contribution from MnO2 was given by MnO2/CNTs with 20 wt% of MnO2 as shown in Fig. 2d. 20 wt% MnO2 supported on CNTs gave a specific capacitance of ∼256.1 F g−1. The value for MnO2 supported on AB and rGO are ∼228.1 and ∼178.2 F g−1, respectively. As more MnO2 was made into the composites, the specific capacitance of supported MnO2 decreased. At the mass loading of 40 and 60 wt%, MnO2 supported on CNTs and AB exhibited similar performance in capacitance, while MnO2 supported rGO showed lower performance. This indicates that the charge transportation within the MnO2/rGO probably was not fast as compared to MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB. The electrochemical impedance spectra of these composites indicated that the resistance of rGO used here was larger than CNTs and AB (Fig. S3†). It should be noted that rGO has higher specific surface area and higher porosity than AB and CNTs (Fig. S4†). However, the double layer capacitance from carbons gave limited contribution and it was also subtracted for comparing the capacitive contributions from MnO2 supported by three carbons. The high porosity of the rGO electrodes did not show better capacitive behaviour at the high rates. It indicates that the influence of the porosity of carbon supports is very small. The lower conductivity probably is one factor that affected the overall charge transportation efficiency. For all composites, with the increase of the mass loading of MnO2, the electrode resistance increased gradually. This is consistent with the reported result that the non-conductive MnO2 usually lowers the overall conductivity of the composite.21 It should be noticed that all MnO2/C composites here are made without any chemical modification at the interface of MnO2 and carbon supports. Carbon materials here only played the roles of the conducting substrate and the MnO2 support. Although rGO has a remarkable capacitance contribution, the large size of rGO sheets might hinder the transportation of charge species in the electrolyte as rGO is multiple stacked at the solid state. Another reason is that the resistance of rGO composites is higher than others. This is probably because these composites were mixed physically. Without a chemical bonding or interaction between MnO2 and carbon, the resistance would be high.28–30 As the weight percentage of MnO2 increased to 80 wt%, the specific capacitance of supported MnO2 in three types of MnO2/C composites were nearly similar.
At the scan rate of 500 mV s−1, it is interesting to find that the specific capacitance of MnO2/rGO is lower than that of MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB no matter how much MnO2 was loaded (Fig. 2e). At this high rate, MnO2/CNTs gave higher capacitance at 20 wt% of MnO2. MnO2/rGO exhibited a similar specific capacitance as pure rGO. However, the specific capacitance of MnO2/rGO dropped significantly as the amount of MnO2 increased more than 20 wt%. Such a trend can be also be found on MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB. For MnO2/CNTs, the highest specific capacitance was given by 20 wt%. Then the capacitance dropped as the amount of MnO2 increased. For MnO2/AB, the highest specific capacitance was given by 40 wt%, followed by the 20 wt% sample. At the high loading amount of MnO2 like 60 and 80 wt%, MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB showed similar specific capacitance. Fig. 2f shows the specific capacitance of supported MnO2 at 500 mV s−1 after subtracting the contribution of carbons at this scan rate. A remarkable phenomenon can be found on MnO2/rGO composites. For all mass loading of MnO2 from 20 to 80 wt%, MnO2 supported on rGO gave similar capacitance performance, which is nearly same as the MnO2 on nickel foam. It indicates that at a high scan rate rGO may not be able to enhance the performance of MnO2. Its function is similar to nickel current collector. Again, this is probably due to the large size of rGO, which hinders the charge transportation within the electrode.20 On the other hand, we found that CNTs and AB were able to play the role of carbon supports to enhance the performance of MnO2 even at this high scan rate. For example, the capacitance contribution from MnO2 could reach 160.0 and 140.2 F g−1 as 20 wt% of MnO2 were supported on CNTs and AB, respectively. Even at 80 wt% of MnO2, MnO2 supported on CNTs and AB could still gave a contribution of ∼20 F g−1, while those on rGO gave ∼6.8 F g−1.
The above results show that AB and CNTs gave similar contribution in supporting MnO2 for enhancing specific capacitance, while rGO can enhance the capacitance much more than AB and CNTs. To demonstrate the capacitance at other scan rates, the average specific capacitance of MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/rGO composites at different scan rates are shown in Fig. 3. At all compositions, MnO2/rGO showed higher capacitance than MnO2/CNTs at slow scan rates. This is consistent with the results in reported literatures.19–21,26 But, at high scan rates like 200 and 500 mV s−1, MnO2/CNTs showed better capacitance. The detailed rate capability analysis is given in the following paragraphs.
The specific capacitances of three types of MnO2/C composites at different scan rates were plotted in Fig. 4. The capacitance here was normalized by the total mass of MnO2 and carbon. Fig. 4a shows the three types of MnO2/C composites with a loading mass of 20 wt% MnO2. They all exhibited a dropping trend in capacitance as the scan rate increased gradually from 5 to 500 mV s−1. However, MnO2/rGO showed a remarkable drop as compared to the other two composites. In particular, the specific capacitance of MnO2/rGO dropped sharply from ∼105.5 to ∼71.8 F g−1 as the scan rate increased from 5 to 50 mV s−1. The capacitance drop is over 30% (see the inset of Fig. 4a). In contrast, the capacitance drops of MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB from 5 to 50 mV s−1 are only ∼16% and ∼20%, respectively. It should be noticed that the specific capacitance of MnO2/rGO at the scan rate of 50 mV s−1 is still higher than that of MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB although MnO2/rGO gave the bigger drop. As the scan rate was increased further to 100, 200, and 500 mV s−1, the capacitance of MnO2/rGO dropped to 56%, 43%, and 25% of the highest capacitance obtained at 5 mV s−1. The other two MnO2/C composites gave smaller drops, i.e. as the scan rate reached to 100, 200, and 500 mV s−1, the capacitance of MnO2/CNTs dropped to 79%, 71%, and 54%, while that of MnO2/AB dropped to 75%, 67%, and 49%, respectively. As a result, MnO2/rGO lost its superiority in the specific capacitance at these high scan rates. At 200 mV s−1, MnO2/CNTs gave higher capacitance (∼52.1 F g−1) than MnO2/rGO (∼45.7 F g−1), which in turn is higher than MnO2/AB (∼41.3 F g−1). At 500 mV s−1, MnO2/CNTs again gave the highest capacitance (∼39.6 F g−1) and MnO2/rGO gave the lowest value (∼26.5 F g−1).
Fig. 4b shows the specific capacitance of MnO2/C composites with 40 wt% of MnO2. At the range of 5–50 mV s−1, MnO2/rGO still exhibited higher capacitance than MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB. It also gave a faster capacitance drop to 66% of the highest capacitance achieved at 5 mV s−1. Both MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB dropped their capacitance to ∼83% of the highest value achieved at 5 mV s−1 (the inset of Fig. 4b). At 100 mV s−1, three types of MnO2/C composites showed similar specific capacitance (∼75 F g−1). As the scan rate went 200 and 500 mV s−1, MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB gave similar capacitance, however, MnO2/rGO exhibited its capacitance ∼15 F g−1 lower than MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB at each of these two scan rates. As compared to the highest capacitance at 5 mV s−1, MnO2/rGO dropped to 35% at 200 mV s−1 and to 17% at 500 mV s−1, while MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB could persist ∼62% at 200 mV s−1 and ∼38% at 500 mV s−1.
Fig. 4c and d show the specific capacitance of MnO2/C composites with 60 and 80 wt% of MnO2 at different scan rates. At high loading mass of MnO2, the three types of composites showed similar capacitance value as well as the capacitance drop in percentage. At 60 and 80 wt% of MnO2, the capacitance of MnO2/rGO was slightly higher than that of MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB as the scan rate was below 50 mV s−1. At the higher rates, the capacitance values of three types of composites were quite close with each other. For example, for 60 wt% of MnO2, the capacitance drop in percentage is similar (the inset of Fig. 4c). They all dropped the capacitance to ∼32% at 200 mV s−1 and ∼15% at 500 mV s−1 of the highest value at 5 mV s−1. For 80 wt% of MnO2, at 500 mV s−1 MnO2/rGO could only achieve ∼6% of capacitance obtained at 5 mV s−1, while MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB could keep ∼14%. The similar and significant drop in capacitance here for all three MnO2/C composites should be ascribed to the high loading of MnO2. It lowered the charge transfer resistance within the composites due to non-conductivity of MnO2.
It is known that the charge storage on MnO2 includes the charge insertion in the crystal of MnO2 and the charge absorbed on the surface.27 At a slow rate, the sufficient time allows the charge storage by charge insertion and surface absorption. As the scan rate increases, the insertion is not favoured and the capacitance is limited by the transportation of charge species within the composite electrode. Therefore the capacitance mainly comes from the surface absorption. For these three types of MnO2/C composites, it is clear that carbon supports have significant influence on the charge storage mechanism. The faster capacitance drop of MnO2/rGO indicates that the charge transportation in MnO2/rGO could be slower than that in MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB. Note that the capacitance drop for pure rGO is similar to CNTs and AB (Fig. 1b) and the faster drop was only observed after combining with MnO2. It is necessary to investigate the specific capacitance contributed only from MnO2. Fig. 5 shows the capacitance contributed from MnO2 by subtracting the capacitance contribution of carbon from that of composite. The four panels correspond to the four compositions. For 20 wt% of MnO2, MnO2 supported on rGO, CNTs, and AB gave specific capacitance of ∼310.2, 292.4, and 274.5 F g−1, respectively, at 5 mV s−1. It indicates that at a slow scan rate rGO could enhance the capacitance of supported MnO2 more than CNTs and AB. However, the capacitance from rGO supported MnO2 dropped quickly as the scan rate went to 10 mV s−1 and the above. For example, at 10 mV s−1 MnO2 supported on rGO gave the capacitance of 271.7 F g−1, which is slightly lower than MnO2 supported on CNTs (274.4 F g−1). At 20 mV s−1, MnO2 supported on rGO dropped the capacitance to 231.1 F g−1, which is lower than the other two composites. The capacitance drop of rGO supported MnO2 at 20 mV s−1 was more than 25%, while that of CNTs and AB supported MnO2 were only ∼10% (the inset of Fig. 5a). Such a drop is very significant for MnO2/rGO. At 200 mV s−1, MnO2 supported on rGO gave the capacitance of 85.2 F g−1, which is only 28% of the capacitance achieved at 5 mV s−1. At 500 mV s−1, MnO2 supported on rGO only gave less than 10% of the capacitance. On the other hand, CNTs and AB exhibited better performance as the scan rate was increased. Their capacitance dropped less than 10% from 5 to 10 mV s−1. Even at 500 mV s−1, CNTs and AB supported MnO2 still could give more than 50% of the capacitance at 500 mV s−1.
For 40 wt% of MnO2 (Fig. 5b), the capacitance contribution from MnO2 was similar in trend to 20 wt% of MnO2. At the slow scan rate, MnO2 supported on rGO showed higher capacitance contribution than those on CNTs and AB. As the scan rate increased to more than 20 mV s−1, MnO2 supported on AB contributed more capacitance than CNTs and rGo did. For example, MnO2 supported on AB gave the capacitance of 199.1 F g−1 at 50 mV s−1, which is higher than CNTs (192.9 F g−1) and rGO (163.1 F g−1). Its capacitance at 100, 200, and 500 mV s−1 are 181.2, 153.1, and 94.9 F g−1, corresponding to 77%, 65%, and 40% of the capacitance at 5 mV s−1, respectively. CNTs supported MnO2 showed similar capacitance drop value as AB supported MnO2 at higher rates. However, rGO supported MnO2 again showed a remarkable drop at higher rates.
As the loading mass of MnO2 was increased to 60 wt%, MnO2 supported on AB was able to give a smaller drop as compared to the other two. However, the MnO2 capacitance drops with the rate increase on all three types of carbons were closer than 20 wt% of MnO2. At 200 mV s−1, the capacitance contribution of MnO2 supported on AB, CNTs, and rGO are 81.6, 69.2, and 46.6 F g−1, respectively. From 100 to 500 mV s−1, the dropping slops of the three types of MnO2/C are similar if the lines are fitted. For 80 wt% of MnO2 (Fig. 5d), MnO2 supported on AB and CNTs contributed quite same capacitance at all high scan rates from 5 to 500 mV s−1. MnO2 supported on rGO exhibited a lower capacitance contribution at the high scan rates from 100 to 500 mV s−1. At the slow rates of 5 and 10 mV s−1, MnO2 supported on rGO could gave higher contribution than those supported on CNTs and AB. At the scan rates of 20 and 50 mV s−1, MnO2 supported on the three carbons showed similar capacitance contribution. For all three carbons, supported MnO2 dropped its capacitance more at high MnO2 mass loading than those at low MnO2 mass loading. For example, from 5 to 500 mV s−1, the capacitance drop of 20 wt% MnO2 supported on AB and CNTs was ∼50%, while that of 80 wt% MnO2 on same carbons was ∼13%. As for rGO supported MnO2, this drop in percentage is more significant. For all mass loading ratios, rGO supported MnO2 dropped its capacitance to less than ∼10% from 5 to 500 mV s−1.
The above results and analysis indicate that rGO is excellent in enhancing the capacitance of MnO2 at the slow scan rates. This is consistent with the most reported results.19–26 However, at the higher rates rGO was not able to enhance the performance of MnO2 more than CNTs and AB. MnO2 supported on rGO exhibited significant capacitance drop with the increase of scan rates. Note that among these three carbon supports, rGO's size can be over a few micrometres in two dimensions, while the other two carbons are much smaller in the same dimensions. It is probably due to the large size of graphene sheet and which hindered the charge transfer within the composite. As a result, the charge has to be stored through the surface absorption at the higher scan rates and the insertion storage is not facilitated. These results indicate that given same MnO2, the carbon supports are influential on the capacitance and rate capability of supported MnO2.
Fig. 6 Galvanostatic charge/discharge curves of MnO2/C composites with 20 wt% of MnO2 at the current density of 3 A g−1. Solid lines and dash lines refer to 2nd and 1000th cycles, respectively. |
Fig. 7 shows the cyclability performance of the three types of MnO2/C composites at the current density of 3 A g−1. For 20 wt% of MnO2 (Fig. 7a), MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB were stable in 1000 cycles. Their specific capacitance could be maintained at ∼59 and ∼39 F g−1 during these cycles. The capacitance drop for them was about 4%. On the other hand, MnO2/rGO exhibited a remarkable capacitance drop of >10% within 100 cycles. The drop continued to ∼20% as the electrode was cycled for 300 cycles. Afterwards, the drop became slower. Fig. 7b shows the composites with 40 wt% of MnO2. MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB showed better stability during 1000 cycles. Their capacitance retention could reach nearly ∼98% and ∼95%. But MnO2/rGO showed ∼20% capacitance loss after 1000 cycles. As the mass loading of MnO2 increased to 60 and 80 wt%, MnO2/CNTs and MnO2/AB could achieve over 90% capacitance retention. In contrast, MnO2/rGO showed a bigger capacitance loss (∼15%). During the cycling measurement, it was found that the electrolyte near the electrode changed to brown color if MnO2/rGO was the working electrode. It is probably due to the better hydrophility of rGO, which facilitated the composite dissolution. As the mass ratio of rGO decreased, the dissolution of MnO2/rGO composites was not that significant as compared to those with high mass ratios of rGO:MnO2. As a result, the rGo composite with the low rGO loading could give slightly higher capacitance retention than those with the high rGO loading.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: TEM images of MnO2 and MnO2/C composites, cyclic voltammograms and electrochemical impedance spectra of MnO2/C composites, the specific capacitance of MnO2/AB at the different scan rates and composition. See DOI: 10.1039/c4ra04914d |
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