Publication | Closed Access
Supercapacitors based on nanostructured carbon electrodes grown by cluster-beam deposition
144
Citations
10
References
1999
Year
Materials ScienceSupercapacitorsChemical EngineeringEngineeringCarbon-based MaterialHybrid CapacitorNanomaterialsNanotechnologyEnergy StorageCluster-beam DepositionSupercapacitorCarbon AerogelsChemistryNanostructured Carbon FilmsElectrochemical Double Layer CapacitorCluster-assembled Carbon ElectrodesNanostructured Carbon Electrodes
Nanostructured carbon films have been grown at room temperature by supersonic cluster beam deposition. Due to a structure based on nanotube embryos and a porosity with grain sizes of a few tens of nanometers, these films have a highly accessible surface area needed for electrochemical applications such as supercapacitors. Films with a density of 1 g/cm3 show, in the dc regime, a specific capacitance per electrode of 75 F/g on a single-cell device with polycarbonate as the organic electrolyte. The resulting energy and power densities of cluster-assembled carbon electrodes are 76 Wh/kg and 506 kW/kg. The possibility of depositing nanostructured films over a large area on a variety of substrates makes cluster-beam deposition very interesting for the realization of supercapacitors.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1