Super-capacitive performance of manganese dioxide/graphene nano-walls electrodes deposited on stainless steel current collectors

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Abstract

Graphene nano-walls (GNWs) are promising materials that can be used as an electrode in electrochemical devices. We have grown GNWs by inductively-coupled plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition on stainless steel (AISI304) substrate. In order to enhance the super-capacitive properties of the electrodes, we have deposited a thin layer of MnO2 by electrodeposition method. We studied the effect of annealing temperature on the electrochemical properties of the samples between 70 °C and 600 °C. Best performance for supercapacitor applications was obtained after annealing at 70 °C with a specific capacitance of 104 F g -1 at 150 mV s -1 and a cycling stability of more than 14k cycles with excellent coulombic efficiency and 73% capacitance retention. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, cyclic voltammetry, and galvanostatic charge/discharge measurements reveal fast proton diffusion (1.3 × 10 -13 cm 2 ·s -1 ) and surface redox reaction after annealing at 70 °C.

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Amade, R., Muyshegyan-Avetisyan, A., González, J. M., del Pino, A. P., György, E., Pascual, E., … Serra, E. B. (2019). Super-capacitive performance of manganese dioxide/graphene nano-walls electrodes deposited on stainless steel current collectors. Materials, 12(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12030483

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