Comparison of Laser-Synthetized Nanographene-Based Electrodes for Flexible Supercapacitors
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Romero, Francisco J.; Romero, Raúl; Ortiz Gómez, Inmaculada; Salinas Castillo, Alfonso; Rodríguez Santiago, NoelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Flexible Electronics Graphene oxide Laser-induced graphene Laser-scribing Supercapacitors
Date
2020-05-30Referencia bibliográfica
Romero, F. J., Gerardo, D., Romero, R., Ortiz-Gomez, I., Salinas-Castillo, A., Moraila-Martinez, C. L., ... & Morales, D. P. (2020). Comparison of Laser-Synthetized Nanographene-Based Electrodes for Flexible Supercapacitors. Micromachines, 11(6), 555. [doi: 10.3390/mi11060555]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Universities FPU16/01451; University of Granada PPJIB2019-05; Spanish Ministry of Science/FEDER-EU TEC2017-89955-P; Mexican Government through Conacyt A1-S-35536Résumé
In this paper, we present a comparative study of a cost-effective method for the mass
fabrication of electrodes to be used in thin-film flexible supercapacitors. This technique is based
on the laser-synthesis of graphene-based nanomaterials, specifically, laser-induced graphene and
reduced graphene oxide. The synthesis of these materials was performed using two different lasers:
a CO2 laser with an infrared wavelength of λ = 10.6 µm and a UV laser (λ = 405 nm). After the
optimization of the parameters of both lasers for this purpose, the performance of these materials
as bare electrodes for flexible supercapacitors was studied in a comparative way. The experiments
showed that the electrodes synthetized with the low-cost UV laser compete well in terms of specific
capacitance with those obtained with the CO2 laser, while the best performance is provided by the rGO
electrodes fabricated with the CO2 laser. It has also been demonstrated that the degree of reduction
achieved with the UV laser for the rGO patterns was not enough to provide a good interaction
electrode-electrolyte. Finally, we proved that the specific capacitance achieved with the presented
supercapacitors can be improved by modifying the in-planar structure, without compromising their
performance, which, together with their compatibility with doping-techniques and surface treatments
processes, shows the potential of this technology for the fabrication of future high-performance and
inexpensive flexible supercapacitors.