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Switchable Polyacrylonitrile-Copolymer for Melt-Processing and Thermal Carbonization - 3D Printing of Carbon Supercapacitor Electrodes with High Capacitance.

Michael UsselmannJoachim BansmannAlexander J C Kuehne
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Polyacrylonitrile (PAN) represents the most widely used precursor for carbon fibers and carbon materials. Carbon materials stand out with their high mechanical performance, but they also show excellent electrical conductivity and high surface area. These properties render carbon materials suitable as electrode material for fuel cells, batteries, and supercapacitors. However, PAN has to be processed from solution before being thermally converted to carbon, limiting its final format to fibers, films, and non-wovens. Here, we present a PAN-copolymer with an intrinsic plasticizer to reduce the melting temperature and avoid undesired entering of the thermal carbonization regime. This plasticizer enables melt extrusion-based additive manufacturing (EAM). The plasticizer in the PAN-copolymer can be switched to increase the melting temperature after processing, allowing the 3D-melt-printed workpiece to be thermally carbonized after EAM. Melt-processing of the PAN copolymer extends the freedom-in-design of carbon materials to mold-free rapid prototyping, in the absence of solvents, which enables more economic and sustainable manufacturing processes. As an example for the capability of this material system, we print open meshed carbon electrodes for supercapacitors that are metal- and binder-free with an optimized thickness of 1.5 mm and a capacitance of up to 387 mF cm -2 . This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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