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      2D‐Nanofiller‐Based Polymer Nanocomposites for Capacitive Energy Storage Applications

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          Abstract

          High‐energy‐density storage devices play a major role in modern electronics from traditional lithium‐ion batteries to supercapacitors for a variety of applications from rechargeable devices to advanced military equipment. Despite the mass adoption of polymer capacitors, their application is limited by their low energy densities and low‐temperature tolerance. Polymer nanocomposites based on 2D nanomaterials have superior capacitive energy densities, higher thermal stabilities, and higher mechanical strength as compared to the pristine polymers and nanocomposites based on 0D or 1D nanomaterials, thus making them ideal for high‐energy‐density dielectric energy storage applications. Here, the recent advances in 2D‐nanomaterial‐based nanocomposites and their implications for energy storage applications are reviewed. Nanocomposites based on conducting 2D nanofillers such as graphene, reduced graphene oxide, MXenes, semiconducting 2D nanofillers including transition metal dichalcogenides such as MoS 2, dielectric 2D nanofillers including hBN, Mica, Al 2O 3, TiO 2, Ca 2Nb 3O 10 and MMT, and their effects on permittivity, dielectric strength, capacitive energy density, efficiency, thermal stability, and the mechanical strength, are discussed. Also, the theory and machine‐learning‐guided design of polymer 2D nanomaterial composites is learnt and the challenges and opportunities for developing ultrahigh‐capacitive‐energy‐density devices based on these nanofiller polymer composites are presented.

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          Flexible and conductive MXene films and nanocomposites with high capacitance.

          MXenes, a new family of 2D materials, combine hydrophilic surfaces with metallic conductivity. Delamination of MXene produces single-layer nanosheets with thickness of about a nanometer and lateral size of the order of micrometers. The high aspect ratio of delaminated MXene renders it promising nanofiller in multifunctional polymer nanocomposites. Herein, Ti3C2T(x) MXene was mixed with either a charged polydiallyldimethylammonium chloride (PDDA) or an electrically neutral polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) to produce Ti3C2T(x)/polymer composites. The as-fabricated composites are flexible and have electrical conductivities as high as 2.2 × 10(4) S/m in the case of the Ti3C2T(x)/PVA composite film and 2.4 × 10(5) S/m for pure Ti3C2T(x) films. The tensile strength of the Ti3C2T(x)/PVA composites was significantly enhanced compared with pure Ti3C2T(x) or PVA films. The intercalation and confinement of the polymer between the MXene flakes not only increased flexibility but also enhanced cationic intercalation, offering an impressive volumetric capacitance of ∼530 F/cm(3) for MXene/PVA-KOH composite film at 2 mV/s. To our knowledge, this study is a first, but crucial, step in exploring the potential of using MXenes in polymer-based multifunctional nanocomposites for a host of applications, such as structural components, energy storage devices, wearable electronics, electrochemical actuators, and radiofrequency shielding, to name a few.
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            Recent advances and applications of machine learning in solid-state materials science

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              Energy storage: The future enabled by nanomaterials

              Lithium-ion batteries, which power portable electronics, electric vehicles, and stationary storage, have been recognized with the 2019 Nobel Prize in chemistry. The development of nanomaterials and their related processing into electrodes and devices can improve the performance and/or development of the existing energy storage systems. We provide a perspective on recent progress in the application of nanomaterials in energy storage devices, such as supercapacitors and batteries. The versatility of nanomaterials can lead to power sources for portable, flexible, foldable, and distributable electronics; electric transportation; and grid-scale storage, as well as integration in living environments and biomedical systems. To overcome limitations of nanomaterials related to high reactivity and chemical instability caused by their high surface area, nanoparticles with different functionalities should be combined in smart architectures on nano- and microscales. The integration of nanomaterials into functional architectures and devices requires the development of advanced manufacturing approaches. We discuss successful strategies and outline a roadmap for the exploitation of nanomaterials for enabling future energy storage applications, such as powering distributed sensor networks and flexible and wearable electronics.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Small Science
                Small Science
                Wiley
                2688-4046
                2688-4046
                July 2023
                April 25 2023
                July 2023
                : 3
                : 7
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Chemistry, Physics and Atmospheric Science Jackson State University 1400 John R. Lynch Street Jackson MS 392017 USA
                [2 ] Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering University of Houston TX 77204 USA
                [3 ] Department of Chemistry Howard University Washington DC WA 20059 USA
                Article
                10.1002/smsc.202300016
                f377afaf-2074-4ee8-89e0-5b0528db3a21
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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