New Polymer-based Electrode can
increase Electrochemical Performance of Super Capacitors in Wearable Integrated
Devices
A new low-cost, pristine, conducting polymer-based
electrode/redox-active electrolyte combination can give enhanced
electrochemical performance and cycling stability to super capacitors,
facilitating energy storage and powering in wearable integrated devices.
With energy demands of the modern world growing, the quest
for novel methods and materials for renewable energy harvesting and storage has
become a hot area of research. Super capacitors or ultra
capacitors are one of the thrust areas in energy storage technology as
they combine the characteristics of conventional capacitors and batteries to
give a sudden kick-start to devices by providing a large amount of power and
sustained energy release.
The electrode materials of super capacitors play a vital
role in determining the performance and stability of these energy devices.
Conducting polymers, like polyaniline and polypyrrole,
are excellent candidates for electrode materials owing to their flexibility,
stability and tunable electrical and electrochemical properties. They are also
inexpensive, lightweight and can be synthesized easily. However, super
capacitors fabricated using these electrodes fail to sustain the initial
electrochemical capacitance after a few cycles of continuous operation. The
poor energy density of these devices is another issue that limits the use of
these devices in practical applications.
The Materials for Energy Storage and Optoelectronic Devices
Group, headed by Dr Sreekanth
J.Varma of the Physics Department of Sanatana Dharma College, Alappuzha, has found a strategy to
improve the performance of polyaniline (PANI)-based supercapacitors
and has achieved very high Specific
Capacitance per unit of area or areal capacitance and prolonged
cycle life. They found that electrodes made from pristine, porous, conducting
and high molecular-weight PANI synthesized by self-stabilized polymerization
(SSDP) when used with an electrolyte powered with an additive that boosts redox
reactions (redox-additive) can drive these energy storage devices to deliver
incredible performances.
The lightweight symmetric supercapacitors
fabricated using these electrodes outperform many new electrode
materials. The conducting polymer-based electrode is lightweight and
highly stable. The supercapacitors' enhanced performance
and long cycle life are attributed to the binder-free nature, porosity, high
and homogeneous molecular weight and appreciable conductivity of the electrode
material and the electrode/redox-activated electrolyte combination.
The study published in the Journal ‘Electrochimica
Acta’ recently, carried out using the instrumentation
facility procured through the Fund for Improvement of S&T Infrastructure
(FIST) programme of the Department of Science and
Technology (DST) programme, will open new vistas for
the development of energy sources for low-cost and lightweight wearable
electronic devices.