4.7 Article

Printable carbon-based supercapacitors reinforced with cellulose and conductive polymers

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENERGY STORAGE
Volume 50, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.est.2022.104224

Keywords

Supercapacitor; Cellulose; PEDOT; Screen printing; Printed electronics; Energy storage

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research [GMT14-0058]
  2. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) [GMT14-0058] Funding Source: Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF)

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Sustainable electrical energy storage is a crucial scientific endeavor, and this study presents a combination of cellulose, PEDOT:PSS, and carbon derivatives for high-performing supercapacitor electrodes for printed electronics. The research shows that a small amount of PEDOT:PSS is needed to achieve optimal performance.
Sustainable electrical energy storage is one of the most important scientific endeavors of this century. Battery and supercapacitor technologies are here crucial, but typically the current state of the art suffers from either lack of large-scale production possibilities, sustainability or insufficient performance and hence cannot match growing demands in society. Paper and cellulosic materials are mature scalable templates for industrial roll-to-roll production. Organic materials, such as conducting polymers, and carbon derivatives are materials that can be synthesized or derived from abundant sources. Here, we report the combination of cellulose, PEDOT:PSS and carbon derivatives for bulk supercapacitor electrodes adapted for printed electronics. Cellulose provides a mesoscopic mesh for the organization of the active ingredients. Furthermore, the PEDOT:PSS in combination with carbon provides superior device characteristics when comparing to the previously standard combination of activated carbon and carbon black. PEDOT:PSS acts as a mixed ion-electron conducting glue, which physically binds activated carbon particles together, while at the same time facilitating swift transport of both electrons and ions. A surprisingly small amount (10%) of PEDOT:PSS is needed to achieve an optimal performance. This work shows that cellulose added to PEDOT:PSS-carbon enables high-performing, mechanically stable, printed super capacitor electrodes using a combination of printing methods.

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