Abstract
Polymer dielectric capacitors are fundamental in advanced electronics and power grids but suffer from low energy density, hindering miniaturization of compact electrical systems. It is shown that high-energy and strong penetrating γ-irradiation significantly enhances capacitive energy storage performance of polymer dielectrics. γ-irradiated biaxially oriented polypropylene (BOPP) films exhibit an extraordinarily high energy density of 10.4 J cm-3 at 968 MV m-1 with an efficiency of 97.3%. In particular, an energy density of 4.06 J cm-3 with an ultrahigh efficiency of 98% is reliably maintained through 20000 charge-discharge cycles under 600 MV m-1. At 125°C, the γ-irradiated BOPP film still delivers a high discharged energy density of 5.88 J cm-3 with an efficiency of 90% at 770 MV m-1. Substantial improvements are also achieved for γ-irradiated cycloolefin copolymers at a high temperature of 150°C, verifying the strategy generalizability. Experimental and theoretical analyses reveal that the excellent performance should be related to the γ-irradiation induced polar functional groups with high electron affinity in the molecular chain, which offer deep energy traps to impede charge transport. This work provides a simple and generally applicable strategy for developing high-performance polymer dielectrics.
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