Abstract

A small volumetric capacitance resulting from a low packing density is one of the major limitations for novel nanocarbons finding real applications in commercial electrochemical energy storage devices. Here we report a carbon with a density of 1.58 g cm(-3), 70% of the density of graphite, constructed of compactly interlinked graphene nanosheets, which is produced by an evaporation-induced drying of a graphene hydrogel. Such a carbon balances two seemingly incompatible characteristics: a porous microstructure and a high density, and therefore has a volumetric capacitance for electrochemical capacitors (ECs) up to 376 F cm(-3), which is the highest value so far reported for carbon materials in an aqueous electrolyte. More promising, the carbon is conductive and moldable, and thus could be used directly as a well-shaped electrode sheet for the assembly of a supercapacitor device free of any additives, resulting in device-level high energy density ECs.

Keywords

SupercapacitorGrapheneCapacitanceMaterials scienceCarbon fibersGraphiteElectrolyteElectrodeElectrochemistryPorosityEnergy storageNanotechnologyEvaporationChemical engineeringCapacitorElectrolytic capacitorComposite materialChemistryVoltageComposite numberElectrical engineering

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Publication Info

Year
2013
Type
article
Volume
3
Issue
1
Pages
2975-2975
Citations
612
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Ying Tao, Xiaoying Xie, Wei Lv et al. (2013). Towards ultrahigh volumetric capacitance: graphene derived highly dense but porous carbons for supercapacitors. Scientific Reports , 3 (1) , 2975-2975. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep02975

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DOI
10.1038/srep02975