Abstract

Energy storage materials are constantly being improved and developed to cope with the ever-increasing demand of the electronic devices industry. Various synthetic approaches have been used to manufacture electrode materials. This paper is focused on the use of intrinsically conductive polymers such as polypyrrole (PPy) in the development of single-walled carbon nanotube-polyimide, SWCNT-PI, supercapacitor electrode materials. The polypyrrole used in the study is doped with different organic acid dopants of various sizes, including styrene sulfonic acid, SSA, toluene sulfonic acid, TSA, dodecylbenzene sulfonic acid, DBSA, naphthalene disulfonic acid, NDSA, and naphthalene trisulfonic acid, NTSA. The number of sulfonic acid functional group per dopant molecule varied from one to three, while the number of benzene rings in the aromatic unit varied from one to two. It is believed that, as the sulfonic acid to the dopant molecule ratio changes, the morphology and electrochemical properties of the doped PPy-coated electrode material will change accordingly. The change in the morphology of the doped PPy, due to the respective dopant, is correlated with the change in the electrochemical properties of the modified composite electrode. The naphthalene trisulfonic acid (NTSA) dopant was found to produce the highest specific capacitance of about 119 F/g at 5 mV/s. Furthermore, the NTSA-doped PPy electrode system showed the highest porosity and highest tan delta damping peak height for the a-transition. The styrene sulfonic acid-doped PPy/SWCNT-PI electrode material showed an impressive storage modulus of more than 2 GPa, but lower porosity. Styrene polymerization is believed to have occurred. The results obtained indicate that the porosity and electrochemical properties of the electrode materials are correlated.

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