Knitted and screen printed carbon-fiber supercapacitors for applications in wearable electronics
Article 2013 en
Authors
KJ
Kristy Jost
DS
Daniel Stenger
CP
Carlos R. Pérez
Abstract
1 min read
The field of energy textiles is growing but continues to face two main challenges: (1) flexible energy storage does not yet exist in a form that is directly comparable with everyday fabrics including their feel, drape and thickness, and (2) in order to produce an “energy textile” as part of a garment, it must be fabricated in a systematic manner allowing for multiple components of e-textiles to be integrated simultaneously. To help address these issues, we have developed textile supercapacitors based on knitted carbon fibers and activated carbon ink. We show capacitances as high as 0.51 F cm−2 per device at 10 mV s−1, which is directly comparable with those of standard activated carbon film electrodes tested under the same conditions. We also demonstrate the performance of the device when bent at 90°, 135°, 180° and when stretched. This is the first report on knitting as a fabrication technique for integrated energy storage devices.
Md Rashedul Islam, Shaila Afroj, Christopher Beach, Mohammad Hamidul Islam, Carinna Parraman, Amr M. Abdelkader, Alexander J. Casson, Konstantin ‘kostya’ Novoselov, Nazmul Karim
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