High-temperature-induced fire is an extremely serious safety risk in energy storage devices; which can be avoided by replacing their components with nonflammable materials. However; these devices are still destroyed by the high-temperature decomposition; lacking reliability. Here, a fire-tolerant supercapacitor is further demonstrated that recovers after burning with a self-healable "solute-in-air" electrolyte. Using fire-tolerant electrodes and separator with a semiopen device configuration; hygroscopic CaCl in the air ("CaCl -in-air") is designed as a self-healable electrolyte; which loses its water solvent at high temperatures but spontaneously absorbs water from the air to recover by itself at low temperatures. The supercapacitor is disenabled at 500 °C; while it recovers after cooling in the air. Especially; it even recovers after burning at around 647 °C with enhanced performance. The study offers a self-healing strategy to design high-safety; high-reliability; and fire-tolerant supercapacitors; which inspires a promising way to deal with general fire-related risks.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202109857 | DOI Listing |
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