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Textile supercapacitors

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Innovative and interdisciplinary solutions to wearable textile energy storage are explored as power sources for wearable electronics and smart textiles. Due to their long cycle life, non-toxic and inexpensive materials, supercapacitors were converted into textiles. Textile supercapacitors were developed using scalable fabrication methods including screen-printing, yarn making, and 3D computerized knitting. The electrode materials reported in this thesis undergo thorough electrochemical analysis, and are capable of storing up to 0.5 F/cm2 which is on par with conventionally solid supercapacitors (0.6 F/cm2). Capacitive yarns are capable of storing up to 37 mF/cm and are shown to be knittable on industrial knitting equipment. Both are some of the highest reported capacitance for all-carbon systems in the field. Yet both are the only systems composed of inexpensive and non-toxic activated carbon, the most commonly used electrode material used in supercapacitors, opposed to carbon nanotubes or graphene, which are typically more 10-100 times more expensive. However, all of the fabrication techniques reported here are also capable of incorporating a wide variety of materials, ultimately broadening the applications of textile energy storage as a whole. Fully machine knitted supercapacitors are also explored and electrochemically characterized in order to determine how the textile structure affects the capacitance. In conclusion, a wide variety of fabrication techniques for making textile supercapacitors were successfully explored.
Drexel University Libraries
Title: Textile supercapacitors
Description:
Innovative and interdisciplinary solutions to wearable textile energy storage are explored as power sources for wearable electronics and smart textiles.
Due to their long cycle life, non-toxic and inexpensive materials, supercapacitors were converted into textiles.
Textile supercapacitors were developed using scalable fabrication methods including screen-printing, yarn making, and 3D computerized knitting.
The electrode materials reported in this thesis undergo thorough electrochemical analysis, and are capable of storing up to 0.
5 F/cm2 which is on par with conventionally solid supercapacitors (0.
6 F/cm2).
Capacitive yarns are capable of storing up to 37 mF/cm and are shown to be knittable on industrial knitting equipment.
Both are some of the highest reported capacitance for all-carbon systems in the field.
Yet both are the only systems composed of inexpensive and non-toxic activated carbon, the most commonly used electrode material used in supercapacitors, opposed to carbon nanotubes or graphene, which are typically more 10-100 times more expensive.
However, all of the fabrication techniques reported here are also capable of incorporating a wide variety of materials, ultimately broadening the applications of textile energy storage as a whole.
Fully machine knitted supercapacitors are also explored and electrochemically characterized in order to determine how the textile structure affects the capacitance.
In conclusion, a wide variety of fabrication techniques for making textile supercapacitors were successfully explored.

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