4.8 Article

Ultracompressible, High-Rate Supercapacitors from Graphene-Coated Carbon Nanotube Aerogels

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 7, Issue 9, Pages 5612-5618

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b01384

Keywords

supercapacitors; ultracompressible; carbon nanotubes; graphene; aerogels

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET-1335417]
  2. NSF NEEP (Nanotechnology, Environmental Effects, and Policy) IGERT fellowship program [0966227]
  3. Division Of Graduate Education
  4. Direct For Education and Human Resources [0966227] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn
  6. Directorate For Engineering [1335417] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Emerging applications for electrochemical energy storage require devices that not only possess high power and energy, but also are capable of withstanding mechanical deformation without degradation of performance. To this end, we have constructed electric double layer capacitors (EDLCs), also referred to as supercapacitors, using thick, ultracompressible graphene-coated carbon nanotube aerogels as electrodes. These electrodes showed a high capacitance in both aqueous and room-temperature ionic liquid (RTIL) electrolytes, achieving between 60 and100 F/g, respectively, with the performance stable over hundreds of charge/discharge cycles and at high rates exceeding 1 V/s. This performance was retained fully under 90% compression of the systems, allowing us to construct cells with high volumetric capacitances of similar to 5-18 F/cm(3) in aqueous and RTIL electrolytes, respectively, which are 50-100 times higher than comparable compressible EDLCs (similar to 0.1 F/cm(3)). Further, the volumetric capacitances approach values reported for compressible pseudocapacitors (similar to 15-30 F/cm(3)) but without the degraded lifetime and reversibility that typically plague compressible pseudocapacitors. The electrodes demonstrated largely strain-invariant ion transport with no change in capacitance and high-rate performance even at 90% compressive strain. This material serves as an excellent platform for exploring the possibility for use of extremely compressible EDLCs with negligible degradation in capacitance in applications such as electric vehicles and wearable electronics.

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