Publication | Closed Access
High Electroactive Material Loading on a Carbon Nanotube@3D Graphene Aerogel for High‐Performance Flexible All‐Solid‐State Asymmetric Supercapacitors
156
Citations
61
References
2017
Year
Materials ScienceSupercapacitorsChemical EngineeringEngineeringBattery Electrode MaterialsFlexible ElectronicsGraphene FoamsCarbon-based MaterialPorous CarbonGrapheneEnergy StorageSupercapacitorElectrochemical Energy StorageCarbon AerogelsHybrid MaterialsGraphene Aerogel
Freestanding carbon‐based hybrids, specifically carbon nanotube@3D graphene (CNTs@3DG) hybrid, are of great interest in electrochemical energy storage. However, the large holes (about 400 µm) in the commonly used 3D graphene foams (3DGF) constitute as high as 90% of the electrode volume, resulting in a very low loading of electroactive materials that is electrically connected to the carbon, which makes it difficult for flexible supercapacitors to achieve high gravimetric and volumetric energy density. Here, a hierarchically porous carbon hybrid is fabricated by growing 1D CNTs on 3D graphene aerogel (CNTs@3DGA) using a facile one‐step chemical vapor deposition process. In this architecture, the 3DGA with ample interconnected micrometer‐sized pores (about 5 µm) dramatically enhances mass loading of electroactive materials comparing with 3DGF. An optimized all‐solid‐state asymmetric supercapacitor (AASC) based on MnO 2 @CNTs@3DGA and Ppy@CNTs@3DGA electrodes exhibits high volumetric energy density of 3.85 mW h cm −3 and superior long‐term cycle stability with 84.6% retention after 20 000 cycles, which are among the best reported for AASCs with both electrodes made of pseudocapacitive electroactive materials.
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