Abstract

AbstractUpon evaluating the pseudocapacitance contribution (k1v) of electrode materials, the exact capacity (also termed as actual pseudocapacity, kQ) is usually ignored. However, there is a significant variation between k1v and kQ. Herein, we designed tunable in situ core‐shell electrode materials to examine the variation between the k1v and kQ. Using nickel foam (NF) as the starting material, the internal structure of NF is systematically controlled via in situ strategy to obtain the optimized nickel oxide core–shell architectures (denoted NFNTO). Despite the directly oxidized NF (denoted NFO) exhibits a higher k1v (79.1%) than the NFNTO (47.6%), the kQ of NFNTO is ≈2.3 fold larger than NFO at the highest current density of 8.0 mA cm−2. The higher kQ can be attributed to the integration of titanium that shortens the Li+ diffusion pathway, boosts the diffusion co‐efficient and improves the electronic conductivity towards achieving enhanced ionic transport.image

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