Publication | Closed Access
Controlled Crumpling of Two-Dimensional Titanium Carbide (MXene) for Highly Stretchable, Bendable, Efficient Supercapacitors
168
Citations
55
References
2018
Year
NanosheetEngineeringBiomedical EngineeringMaterials FabricationEfficient SupercapacitorsBiomedical DevicesEnergy Storage DeviceHybrid MaterialsMxenesMaterials ScienceWearable ElectronicsEnergy StorageSupercapacitorTwo-dimensional Titanium CarbideElectrochemical Double Layer CapacitorSurface NanoengineeringTwo-dimensional Mxene MaterialsSupercapacitorsElectronic MaterialsNanomaterialsCrumpled MxeneApplied PhysicsHighly StretchableStable Mxene ArchitecturesNanofabricationFunctional Materials
Two-dimensional MXene materials have demonstrated attractive electrical and electrochemical properties in energy storage applications. Adding stretchability to MXene remains challenging due to its high mechanical stiffness and weak intersheet interaction, so the assembling techniques for mechanically stable MXene architectures require further development. We report a simple fabrication by harnessing the interfacial instability to generate higher dimensional MXene nanocoatings capable of programmed crumpling/unfolding. A sequential patterning approach enabled the design of sequence-dependent MXene textures across multiple length scales, which were utilized for controllable wetting surfaces and high-areal-capacitance electrodes. We next transferred the crumpled MXene nanocoating onto an elastomer to fabricate an MXene/elastomer electrode with high stretchability. The accordion-like MXene can be reversibly folded/unfolded and still preserve efficient specific capacitances. We further fabricated asymmetric MXene supercapacitors, and the devices demonstrated efficient electrochemical performance and large deformability (180° bendability, 100% stretchability). Our texturing techniques can be applied to large MXene families for designing stretchable architectures in wearable electronics.
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