Abstract

The development of aluminum ion batteries (AIBs) is retarded by the low capacity of intercalation cathode and ineffective aluminum dissolution/deposition at Al anode. To solve the issues, benzoquinone(BQ)–preinserted hydrated vanadium oxide formulated as (BQ)0.04V2O5·0.87H2O (BQ-VO) with a large interlayer spacing of 13.3 Å was synthesized, which was used as both cathode and anode with Al(ClO4)3 acetonitrile (AN) electrolyte to fabricate a symmetric aluminum–ion supercapacitor. BQ-VO delivers a large capacity of ~152 mAh g−1 at 0.2 A g−1 in the range of 0–1.5 V, which is associated with the intercalation of ion (such as ClO4−, Al3+ or Al3+ − ClO4− pair) into BQ-VO and the reversible redox reaction of ClO4− ↔ Cl−, giving rise to a novel symmetric dual–ion hybrid supercapacitor. The reversible conversion of ClO4− ↔ Cl− is not observed in NaClO4 AN electrolyte, which is only excited by Al3+, leading to a continuous increasing capacity in the early stage of the cycling test. On the contrary, in the NaClO4 AN electrolyte, BQ-VO illustrates a surface-controlled capacitive performance with excellent cycling stability. Molecular dynamic (MD) simulations reveal that Al3+ and Na+ possess different solvation/anion sheaths, leading to different electrochemical performances of BQ-VO in the Al(ClO4)3 and NaClO4 electrolytes. The present work provides a routine to utilize the redox reaction of halide for energy storage.

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