Focused Solar-Induced Construction of Activated Solar Carbon@Carbon Fiber Coaxial Electrode from Waste Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Polymer and Its Supercapacitor Performance
Chongjun Zhao, Tenghui Huang, Yingying Rong, Yanyu Guo, Puqi Geng, Chunhua Zhao

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to create a high-performance supercapacitor electrode from waste carbon fiber-reinforced polymer using solar energy.
Contribution
A novel solar-induced process converts waste carbon fiber into a coaxial electrode with excellent supercapacitor performance.
Findings
The electrode achieves a high specific capacity of 227.1 F g−1 at 0.5 A g−1.
It retains 98.9% capacitance after 20,000 cycles.
The symmetrical supercapacitor has an energy density of 16.68 Wh kg−1.
Abstract
Carbon layer-coated μm-sized carbon fiber has the potential to be developed as an electrode, as it can be directly used as an electrode without any preparation process in the absence of an insulating binder. In our work, a carbon layer-coated carbon fiber (C@CF) coaxial structure is constructed by in situ conversion of the epoxy resin around the carbon fiber into a carbon layer, in which a sandwich scaffold of cover/CFRP/screen is designed and adopted. The activated SC@CF, i.e., A-SC@CF, can be directly served as the electrode, and has excellent supercapacitor performance: a high specific capacity of 227.1 F g−1 at 0.5 A g−1, with a capacitance retention of 98.9% after 20,000 cycles for the electrode, and an energy density of 16.68 Wh kg−1 at the power density of 1400 W kg−1 for its symmetrical supercapacitor (SSC).
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Taxonomy
TopicsSupercapacitor Materials and Fabrication · Conducting polymers and applications · Advanced battery technologies research
