Litcius/Paper detail

Transparent and Multi‐Foldable Nanocellulose Paper Microsupercapacitors

Sang‐Woo Kim, Kwon‐Hyung Lee, Yong‐Hyeok Lee, Won‐Jae Youe, Jaegyoung Gwon, Sang‐Young Lee

2022Advanced Science26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Despite the ever‐increasing demand for transparent power sources in wireless optoelectronics, most of them have still relied on synthetic chemicals, thus limiting their versatile applications. Here, a class of transparent nanocellulose paper microsupercapacitors (TNP‐MSCs) as a beyond‐synthetic‐material strategy is demonstrated. Onto semi‐interpenetrating polymer network‐structured, thiol‐modified transparent nanocellulose paper, a thin layer of silver nanowire and a conducting polymer (chosen as a pseudocapacitive electrode material) are consecutively introduced through microscale‐patterned masks (which are fabricated by electrohydrodynamic jet printing) to produce a transparent conductive electrode (TNP‐TCE) with planar interdigitated structure. This TNP‐TCE, in combination with solid‐state gel electrolytes, enables on‐demand (in‐series/in‐parallel) cell configurations in a single body of TNP‐MSC. Driven by this structural uniqueness and scalable microfabrication, the TNP‐MSC exhibits improvements in optical transparency ( T = 85%), areal capacitance (0.24 mF cm −2 ), controllable voltage (7.2 V per cell), and mechanical flexibility (origami airplane), which exceed those of previously reported transparent MSCs based on synthetic chemicals.

Topics & Concepts

NanocelluloseMaterials scienceNanotechnologyMicroscale chemistryPolyanilineElectrodeSupercapacitorElectrical conductorMicrotechnologyOptoelectronicsTransparent conducting filmMicrofabricationPolymerCapacitanceThin filmFabricationComposite materialChemical engineeringCellulosePolymerizationMathematics educationEngineeringMedicineChemistryAlternative medicinePhysical chemistryMathematicsPathologyAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical ApplicationsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics