Cellulose-derived carbon nanofibers/graphene composite electrodes for powerful compact supercapacitors
Journal article, 2017

Herein, we demonstrate a unique supercapacitor composite electrode material that is originated from a sustainable cellulosic precursor via simultaneous one-step carbonization/reduction of cellulose/graphene oxide mats at 800 degrees C. The resulting freestanding material consists of mechanically stable carbon nanofibrous (CNF, fiber diameter 50-500 nm) scaffolds tightly intertwined with highly conductive reduced graphene oxide (rGO) sheets with a thickness of 1-3 nm. The material is mesoporous and has electrical conductivity of 49 S cm(-1), attributed to the well-interconnected graphene layers. The electrochemical evaluation of the CNF/graphene composite electrodes in a supercapacitor device shows very promising volumetric values of capacitance, energy and power density (up to 46 F cm(-3), 1.46 W h L-1 and 1.09 kW L-1, respectively). Moreover, the composite electrodes retain an impressive 97% of the initial capacitance over 4000 cycles. With these superior properties, the produced composite electrodes should be the "looked-for" components in compact supercapacitors used for increasingly popular portable electronics and hybrid vehicles.

activated carbon

structures

electrochemical energy-storage

reduced

flexible supercapacitors

paper-based supercapacitors

porous

enhanced performance

carbonization

capacitance

Chemistry

surface-area

graphene oxide

Author

Volodymyr Kuzmenko

Electronics Material and Systems

Nan Wang

Electronics Material and Systems

Mohammad Mazharul Haque

Electronics Material and Systems

Olga Naboka

National Research Council Canada

M. Flygare

Karlstads universitet

Krister Svensson

Karlstads universitet

Paul Gatenholm

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Johan Liu

Electronics Material and Systems

Peter Enoksson

Electronics Material and Systems

RSC Advances

2046-2069 (ISSN)

Vol. 7 73 45968-45977

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Transport

Production

Energy

Materials Science

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Chemical Engineering

DOI

10.1039/c7ra07533b

More information

Created

10/25/2017