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Iron oxides nanobelt arrays rooted in nanoporous surface of carbon tube textile as stretchable and robust electrodes for flexible supercapacitors with ultrahigh areal energy density and remarkable cycling-stability
We report a significant advance toward the rational design and fabrication of stretchable and robust flexible electrodes with favorable hierarchical architectures constructed by homogeneously distributed α-Fe(2)O(3) nanobelt arrays rooted in the surface layer of nanoporous carbon tube textile (NPCTT...
Autores principales: | , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Nature Publishing Group UK
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7335107/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32620806 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-68032-z |
Sumario: | We report a significant advance toward the rational design and fabrication of stretchable and robust flexible electrodes with favorable hierarchical architectures constructed by homogeneously distributed α-Fe(2)O(3) nanobelt arrays rooted in the surface layer of nanoporous carbon tube textile (NPCTT). New insight into alkali activation assisted surface etching of carbon and in-situ catalytic anisotropic growth is proposed, and is experimentally demonstrated by the synthesis of the Fe(2)O(3) nanobelt arrays/NPCTT. The Fe(2)O(3)/NPCTT electrode shows excellent flexibility and great stretchability, especially has a high specific areal capacitance of 1846 mF cm(−2) at 1 mA cm(−2) and cycling stability with only 4.8% capacitance loss over 10,000 cycles at a high current density of 20 mA cm(−2). A symmetric solid-state supercapacitor with the Fe(2)O(3)/NPCTT achieves an operating voltage of 1.75 V and a ultrahigh areal energy density of 176 µWh cm(−2) (at power density of 748 µW cm(−2)), remarkable cycling stability, and outstanding reliability with no capacity degradation under repeated large-angle twisting. Such unique architecture improves both mechanical robustness and electrical conductivity, and allows a strong synergistic attribution of Fe(2)O(3) and NPCTT. The synthetic method can be extended to other composites such as MnO nanosheet arrays/NPCTT and Co(3)O(4) nanowire arrays/NPCTT. This work opens up a new pathway to the design of high-performance devices for wearable electronics. |
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