Abstract

Electrochemical capacitors using neutral aqueous electrolytes are safer and cheaper and allow diverse current collectors compared with the counterparts using organic or acidic/alkaline electrolytes. Two-dimensional (2D) MXenes have been demonstrated as the high-capacitive materials with high rate performance. However, MXene electrodes often exhibit a limited capacitance in neutral electrolytes, where the reversible electrochemical reactions rely greatly on the structural and surface properties of MXenes depending on their synthesis methods. Herein, a simple and highly efficient strategy, which combines HF etching of Ti3AlC2 powder and subsequent amine-assisted delamination at a low temperature, is developed to synthesize 2D Ti3C2Tx MXenes. The comprehensive results demonstrate that the enlarged interlayer spacing and the presence of more -O-containing functional groups synergistically contribute to the improvement of capacitive performance in neutral electrolytes. The 2D Ti3C2Tx MXenes show excellent electrochemical performance in various neutral electrolytes, and a high specific gravimetric capacitance of 149.8 F/g is achieved in 1.0 M Li2SO4. Furthermore, the flexible solid-state supercapacitors (SCs) with a neutral PVA/LiCl gel electrolyte possess a superior areal capacitance (163.1 mF/cm2) and high energy density (17.6 μWh/cm2 at 0.07 mW/cm2), together with high user safety. This work provides a promising guideline of synthesis strategy for high-capacitive MXenes used in neutral electrolytes, which may promote the development of safe and flexible power sources with a high energy density.

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