Litcius/Paper detail

Laser‐Induced Graphenization of PDMS as Flexible Electrode for Microsupercapacitors

Pietro Zaccagnini, Chiara Ballin, Marco Fontana, Matteo Parmeggiani, Stefano Bianco, Stefano Stassi, Alessandro Pedico, Sergio Ferrero, Andrea Lamberti

2021Advanced Materials Interfaces50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Laser graphenization of polymeric surfaces has emerged as one of the most promising technologies to fabricate flexible electrodes. Unfortunately, despite the large number of materials suitable for laser‐induced graphene (LIG) fabrication, there is a lack of stretchable polymers, hindering the full exploitation of LIG for flexible electronics. Herein, the laser graphenization of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), the most exploited elastomeric substrate for flexible electronic device fabrication, is proposed for the first time. The low carbon content and the absence of aromatic structures strongly limit the graphenization process resulting in limited conduction properties. Nevertheless, by adding triethylene glycol (TEG) as carbon source into the PDMS matrix, it is possible to improve the graphenization and to reduce the sheet resistance of the written LIG by two orders of magnitude down to 130 ohm sq −1 . The PDMS‐TEG material becomes a suitable candidate for flexible microsupercapacitor fabrication with specific capacitance values as high as 287 µF cm −2 and energy and power density approaching LIG‐based supercapacitors fabricated onto traditional polyimide substrates.

Topics & Concepts

Materials sciencePolydimethylsiloxanePolyimideFabricationSupercapacitorElastomerGrapheneCapacitanceElectrodeLaserFlexible electronicsOptoelectronicsSubstrate (aquarium)PolymerNanotechnologyComposite materialOpticsChemistryAlternative medicinePhysicsOceanographyGeologyLayer (electronics)Physical chemistryMedicinePathologySupercapacitor Materials and FabricationAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications