Abstract

The highly porous and binder-free flexible paper electrodes can enhance the specific capacitance of symmetric supercapacitors (SCs) due to their large surface and effective ion diffusion pathways. We synthesized the exfoliated graphite (ExG) by the thermal exfoliation method of chemically treated graphite flakes and compressed it into a paper-like thin sheet (binder-free) of ∼0.15 mm thickness. The coin cell SCs with copper (Cu) and stainless steel (SS) as current collectors have been fabricated for the electrochemical measurement. The cyclic voltammetry and galvanostatic charge/discharge measurements are investigated at various scan rates and current densities. The SCs with Cu foil as a current collector perform better than SS-based SCs. The Cu current collector-based SCs showed a specific capacitance of 37.08 mF cm−2, whereas it was ∼29.98 mF cm−2 for SS-based SCs at a 0.01 V s−1 scan rate across a 0–0.6 V potential window. Approximately no degradation in charge storage capacity for more than 15 000 cycles at 0.1 V s−1 shows the ultra-stability of the flexible ExG-based binder-free electrodes. A digital watch is powered using the fabricated pouch cell supercapacitor with copper-based current collectors to show the potential of SCs.

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