Cyclic voltammetry (CV) is a widespread experimental technique for characterizing electrochemical devices such as supercapacitors. Despite its wide use, a quantitative relation between CV and microscopic properties of supercapacitors is… Click to show full abstract
Cyclic voltammetry (CV) is a widespread experimental technique for characterizing electrochemical devices such as supercapacitors. Despite its wide use, a quantitative relation between CV and microscopic properties of supercapacitors is still lacking. In this Letter, we use both the microscopic "stack-electrode" model and its equivalent circuit for predicting the cyclic voltammetry of electric double-layer formation in porous electrodes. We find that the dimensionless combination ωτ_{n}, with ω the scan frequency of the time-dependent potential and τ_{n} the relaxation timescale of the stack-electrode model, governs the CV curves and capacitance: the capacitance is scan-rate independent for ωτ_{n}≪1 and scan-rate dependent for ωτ_{n}≫1. With a single fit parameter and all other model parameters dictated by experiments, our model reproduces experimental CV curves over a wide range of ω. Meanwhile, the influence of the pore size distribution on the charging dynamics is investigated to explain the experimental data.
               
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