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3D Printing of Carbon Nanotubes-Based Microsupercapacitors.

Ben Q LiHan ZhouBen Q LiShujiang Ding
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
A novel 3D printing procedure is presented for fabricating carbon-nanotubes (CNTs)-based microsupercapacitors. The 3D printer uses a CNTs ink slurry with a moderate solid content and prints a stream of continuous droplets. Appropriate control of a heated base is applied to facilitate the solvent removal and adhesion between printed layers and to improve the structure integrity without structure delamination or distortion upon drying. The 3D-printed electrodes for microsupercapacitors are characterized by SEM, laser scanning confocal microscope, and step profiler. Effect of process parameters on 3D printing is also studied. The final solid-state microsupercapacitors are assembled with the printed multilayer CNTs structures and poly(vinyl alcohol)-H3PO4 gel as the interdigitated microelectrodes and electrolyte. The electrochemical performance of 3D printed microsupercapacitors is also tested, showing a significant areal capacitance and excellent cycle stability.
Keyphrases
  • carbon nanotubes
  • solid state
  • ionic liquid
  • high resolution
  • gold nanoparticles
  • high intensity
  • solar cells
  • high speed
  • molecularly imprinted
  • simultaneous determination
  • liquid chromatography