posted on 2018-06-04, 00:00authored byHadi Khani, Timothy J. Dowell, David O. Wipf
We
develop zirconium-templated NiO/NiOOH nanosheets on nickel foam and
polypyrrole-embedded in exfoliated carbon fiber cloth as complementary
electrodes for an asymmetric battery-type supercapacitor device. We
achieve high volumetric energy and power density by the modification
of commercially available current collectors (CCs). The modified CCs
provide the source of active material, actively participate in the
charge storage process, provide a larger surface area for active material
loading, need no additional binders or conductive additives, and retain
the ability to act as the CC. Nickel foam (NF) CCs are modified by
use of a soft-templating/solvothermal treatment to generate NiO/NiOOH
nanosheets, where the NF is the source of Ni for the synthesis. Carbon-fiber
cloth (CFC) CCs are modified by an electrochemical oxidation/reduction
process to generate exfoliated core–shell structures (ECFC).
Electropolymerization of pyrrole into the shell structure produces
polypyrrole embedded in exfoliated core–shell material (PPy@rECFC).
Battery-type supercapacitor devices are produced with NiO/NiOOH@NF
and PPy@rECFC as positive and negative electrodes, respectively, to
demonstrate the utility of this approach. Volumetric energy densities
for the full-cell device are in the range of 2.60–4.12 mWh
cm–3 with corresponding power densities in the range
of 9.17–425.58 mW cm–3. This is comparable
to thin-film lithium-ion batteries (0.3–10 mWh cm–3) and better than some commercial supercapacitors (<1 mWh cm–3).1 The energy and power density is impressive
considering that it was calculated using the entire cell volume (active
materials, separator, and both CCs). The full-cell device is highly
stable, retaining 96% and 88% of capacity after 2000 and 5000 cycles,
respectively. These results demonstrate the utility of directly modifying
the CCs and suggest a new method to produce high volumetric energy
density and power density storage devices.