Polyaniline and polypyrrole pseudocapacitor electrodes with excellent cycling stability

Tianyu Liu, Lauren Finn, Minghao Yu, Hanyu Wang, Teng Zhai, Xihong Lu, Yexiang Tong, Yat Li

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

725 Scopus citations

Abstract

Conducting polymers such as polyaniline and polypyrrole have been widely used as pseudocapacitive electrode materials for supercapacitors. However, their structural instability resulting from repeated volumetric swelling and shrinking during charge/discharge process has been a major hurdle for their practical applications. This work demonstrates a simple and general strategy to substantially enhance the cycling stability of conductive polymer electrodes by deposition of a thin carbonaceous shell onto their surface. Significantly, carbonaceous shell-coated polyaniline and polypyrrole electrodes achieved remarkable capacitance retentions of ∼95 and ∼85% after 10 000 cycles. Electron microscopy studies revealed that the presence of ∼5 nm thick carbonaceous shell can effective prevent the structural breakdown of polymer electrodes during charge/discharge process. Importantly, the polymer electrodes with a ∼5 nm thick carbonaceous shell exhibited comparable specific capacitance and pseudocapacitive behavior as the bare polymer electrodes. We anticipate that the same strategy can be applied for stabilizing other polymer electrode materials. The capability of fabricating stable polymer electrodes could open up new opportunities for pseudocapacitive devices.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2522-2527
Number of pages6
JournalNano Letters
Volume14
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 14 2014
Externally publishedYes

Funding

FundersFunder number
University of California

    Keywords

    • Polyaniline
    • carbonaceous shell
    • cycling stability
    • polypyrrole
    • pseudocapacitor

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