| Literature DB >> 29968704 |
Xiangming Li1,2, Jinyou Shao3, Sung-Kon Kim2,4, Chaochao Yao1, Junjie Wang2, Yu-Run Miao4, Qiye Zheng2, Pengcheng Sun2, Runyu Zhang2, Paul V Braun5,6.
Abstract
Formation of thick, high energy density, flexible solid supercapacitors is challenging because of difficulties infilling gel electrolytes into porous electrodes. Incomplete infilling results in a low capacitance and poor mechanical properties. Here we report a bottom-up infilling method to overcome these challenges. Electrodes up to 500 μm thick, formed from multi-walled carbon nanotubes and a composite of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene), polystyrene sulfonate and multi-walled carbon nanotubes are successfully infilled with a polyvinyl alcohol/phosphoric acid gel electrolyte. The exceptional mechanical properties of the multi-walled carbon nanotube-based electrode enable it to be rolled into a radius of curvature as small as 0.5 mm without cracking and retain 95% of its initial capacitance after 5000 bending cycles. The areal capacitance of our 500 μm thick poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene), polystyrene sulfonate, multi-walled carbon nanotube-based flexible solid supercapacitor is 2662 mF cm-2 at 2 mV s-1, at least five times greater than current flexible supercapacitors.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29968704 PMCID: PMC6030180 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04937-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Top-down vs bottom-up infilling. a The top-down infilling method. Left to right: sol is casted onto a porous electrode; sol above the porous electrode gels forming a skin; sol in the porous electrode gels, leaving behind voids; a free-standing incompletely filled electrode is obtained after the separation from the substrate. b The bottom-up infilling method. Left to right: sol is cast on a porous electrode located on a gas-permeable substrate and covered with an impermeable film; the gel forms from the bottom-up until the entire porous electrode is infilled with gel; a free-standing gel-filled electrode is obtained after removal of the substrate. c SEM images of the top of the MWCNT electrodes infilled with gel electrolyte by the top-down (left) and bottom-up (right) methods. Overlaid on the images are energy dispersive spectroscopy scans where the phosphorus peaks indicate the presence of the electrolyte. Scale bar for c is 200 nm
Fig. 2Electrochemical properties of the top-down and bottom-up infilled FSSCs. a CV and b GCD curves of the different FSSCs. c Areal capacitances of the top-down and bottom-up infilled FSSCs at different current densities. d Thickness dependence of the areal capacitance for top-down and bottom-up infilled FSSC devices at 0.5 and 5 mA cm–2
Fig. 3Gel filling method dependent mechanical stability. a, b The gel infilling-dependent microcracks (or lack of microcracks) in ~150 μm in thick MWCNT electrodes rolled-up over a glass tube with a radius of ~0.5 mm fabricated by the two methods. Electrochemical performance of c and d once rolled-up FSSC devices and e after repeated bending. In e the capacitance retention with the bending number is confirmed by GCD at a current density of 0.15 mA after every 500 bends at bending radius of curvature of 5.7 mm. Scale bar for a and b is 500 μm
Fig. 4Electrical performance of FSSCs formed using 500 μm thick PEDOT/PSS-WMCNT electrodes. a CV, b GCD profiles, and c Nyquist plots (100 kHz to 10 mHz) of the top-down and bottom-up designs. Note that the inset is the plot for the bottom-up infilled FSSC. d CV and e GCD curves over different potential windows for a FSSC formed from bottom-up infilled 500 μm thick PEDOT/PSS-MWCNT electrodes. f Areal Ragone plot (per cm2 of the FSSC device). This worka and this workb refers to the bottom-up infilled FSSCs with an electrode thicknesses of 500 μm tested over potential windows of 0 to 1.2 V and 0 to 0.8 V, respectively