Abstract

Polymer dielectrics need to operate at high temperatures to meet the demand of electrostatic energy storage in modern electronic and electrical systems. The polymer nanocomposite approach, an extensively proved strategy for the performance improvement, encounters the bottleneck of reduced energy density and poor discharge efficiency beyond 150°C. Here, we report a polymer/metal oxide cluster composite prepared based on the "site isolation" strategy. Capitalizing on the quantum size effect, the bandgap and surface defect states of the ultra-small inorganic clusters (2.2nm diameter) are modulated to markedly differ from the regular-sized nanoparticles. Experimental results in conjunction with computational simulation demonstrate that, the presence of ultra-small inorganic clusters can introduce more abundant, deeper traps in the composite dielectric with respect to the conventional polymer/nanoparticle blends. Unprecedented high-temperature capacitive performance including colossal energy density (6.8 Jcm-3 ), ultra-high discharge efficiency (95%) and superior stability at different electric field frequencies, are achieved in these polymer/cluster composites up to 200°C. Along with the advantages in material preparation (inexpensive precursors and one-pot synthesis), such polymer/inorganic cluster composite approach is promising for high-temperature dielectric energy storage in practical power apparatus and electronic devices. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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