4.6 Article

A self-supported, flexible, binder-free pseudo-supercapacitor electrode material with high capacitance and cycling stability from hollow, capsular polypyrrole fibers

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 3, Issue 31, Pages 16162-16167

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c5ta03585f

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Flexible energy devices with high performance and long-term stability are highly promising for applications in portable electronics, but remain challenging to develop. As an electrode material for pseudo-supercapacitors, conducting polymers typically show higher energy storage ability over carbon materials and larger conductivity than transition-metal oxides. However, conducting polymer-based supercapacitors often have poor cycling stability, attributable to the structural rupture caused by the large volume contrast between doping and de-doping states, which has been the main obstacle to their practical applications. Herein, we report a simple method to prepare a flexible, binder-free, self-supported polypyrrole (PPy) supercapacitor electrode with high cycling stability through using novel, hollow PPy nanofibers with porous capsular walls as a film-forming material. The unique fiber structure and capsular walls provide the PPy film with enough free-space to adapt to volume variation during doping/de-doping, leading to super-high cycling stability (capacitance retention > 90% after 11 000 charge-discharge cycles at a high current density of 10 A g(-1)) and high rate capability (capacitance retention similar to 82.1% at a current density in the range of 0.25-10 A g(-1)).

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