Graphene synthesized on porous silicon for active electrode material of supercapacitors

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Abstract

We present graphene synthesized by chemical vapour deposition under atmospheric pressure on both porous nanostructures and flat wafers as electrode scaffolds for supercapacitors. A 3nm thin gold layer was deposited on samples of both porous and flat silicon for exploring the catalytic influence during graphene synthesis. Micro-four-point probe resistivity measurements revealed that the resistivity of porous silicon samples was nearly 53 times smaller than of the flat silicon ones when all the samples were covered by a thin gold layer after the graphene growth. From cyclic voltammetry, the average specific capacitance of porous silicon coated with gold was estimated to 267 μF/cm2 while that without catalyst layer was 145μF/cm2. We demonstrated that porous silicon based on nanorods can play an important role in graphene synthesis and enable silicon as promising electrodes for supercapacitors.

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Su, B. B., Chen, X. Y., & Halvorsen, E. (2016). Graphene synthesized on porous silicon for active electrode material of supercapacitors. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 773). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/773/1/012057

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