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3D-Printed Supercapacitor Electrode Breaks Records in Lab Tests


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A scanning electron microscope image of the three-dimensionally-printed graphene aerogel lattice.

Researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, working with colleagues at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, have developed new supercapacitor electrodes using a printable graphene aerogel.

Credit: Bin Yao

University of California, Santa Cruz (UC Santa Cruz) and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory researchers have developed new supercapacitor electrodes using a printable graphene aerogel to build a porous three-dimensional (3D) scaffold equipped with pseudocapacitive material.

In tests, the researchers say, the technology achieved the highest areal capacitance ever reported for a supercapacitor, potentially leading to wider use of fast-charging energy storage devices and novel designs for electronic products.

Said UC Santa Cruz's Yat Li, "The key innovation in this study is the use of 3D printing to fabricate a rationally designed structure providing a carbon scaffold to support the pseudocapacitive material. These findings validate a new approach to fabricating energy storage devices using 3D printing."

From UC Santa Cruz
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Abstracts Copyright © 2018 Information Inc., Bethesda, Maryland, USA


 

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