Abstract

Hydrous RuOx has been one of the well-studied materials for application in supercapacitors owing to its excellent properties (high conductivity similar to metals, redox activity capable of fast faradaic reactions and structural water enabling swift proton transfer and decreased diffusion distance). The main issue regarding supercapacitors is that, they suffer from low energy density compared to batteries. One way to overcome this problem is to increase surface area of the active material and hence the energy stored through 3D structuration of current collector. Multiple techniques have been used in this regard like 3D printing, pholitography methods...etc.However, these techniques are pretty complex, time consuming and have constraining conditions. Hence, it’s necessary to develop economic and simple routes for 3D structuration of electrodes for micro-supercapacitors. One simple, time efficient and easy to set up method that can be used under ambient conditions is the electrochemical structuration using dynamic hydrogen bubble template (DHBT). With this strategy, 3D scaffolds which can hold small quantities of intrinsic pseudocapacitve materials like RuOx can be fabricated. The challenge in this latter case is magnified, needing controlled decoration of active materials for efficient utilization and full benefit of the 3D framework. Hence, the pursuit of superior micro-supercapacitors not only needs controlled deposition, but also requires stable 3D scaffolds to maximize capacitance per footprint area1. We have previously shown electrodeposition of active RuO2 on porous gold electrodes for micro-supercapacitors achieving a capacitance of 3 F/cm².One other approach would be to deposit the active material directly by the DHBT method. As RuOx is a good conductor this would not hinder its efficiency (this would not be the case for MnO2 for example). The difficulty here is that, not all metals can be deposited by the DHBT technique as other factors play a crucial role such as the exchanged current density towards H2 evolution and mechanical stability3 In the current work, we report two different strategies for the 3D deposition of RuOx. The first is the successful fabrication of highly porous 3D platinum current collector using DHBT followed by a conformal coating of hydrous RuOx to achieve a specific capacitance as high as 10 F/cm². The second is the direct electrodeposition of the active material, RuOx, in a 3D porous structure. These two approaches are characterized and discussed within the framework of fabricating superior micro-supercapacitors with excellent capacitance and low internal resistance. References N. A. Kyeremateng, T. Brousse, and D. Pech, Nat. Nanotechnol., 12, 7–15 (2017)A. Ferris, S. Garbarino, D. Guay, and D. Pech, Adv. Mater., 27, 6625–6629 (2015)Plowman, B. J., Jones, L. A., & Bhargava, S. K. Chem. Commun., 51(21), 4331–4346. Figure 1

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