Electrode Flexibility Enhances Electrolyte Dynamics during Supercapacitor Charging
Z Waysenson and A France-Lanord and A Serva and P Simon and M Salanne and AM Saitta, ACS NANO, 19, 29462-29469 (2025).
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5c07490
Supercapacitors are energy storage devices with high power density and
long cycle life. Combined with spectroscopy and electrochemistry,
molecular simulations and theory have allowed to characterize their
charging mechanisms, and we now have an excellent understanding of the
effect of properties such as nanopore size or structural disorder on the
supercapacitor performances. However, the influence of electrode
flexibility remains to be addressed as state-of-the-art models focused
on the polarization effects of the electrode, but enforced its
structural rigidity, as an approximation. Here we overcome this
limitation by integrating a constant-potential molecular dynamics scheme
with a state-of-the-art machine-learning potential for carbon, while
controlling the applied potential. Using nanoporous sp2/sp3 carbon
electrodes filled with an ionic liquid electrolyte, we compare the
behavior of the rigidified and flexible frameworks; the latter allowing
for local atomic relaxation, breathing modes, etc. We demonstrate that
flexibility significantly enhances in-pore ionic diffusivity, thus
shortening the characteristic charging time by a factor of 3 relative to
the rigid analogue, while the specific capacitance remains in the
experimental range (approximate to 140 F
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