High-Voltage Flexible Microsupercapacitors Based on Laser-Induced Graphene

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2018 Aug 8;10(31):26357-26364. doi: 10.1021/acsami.8b10301. Epub 2018 Jul 24.

Abstract

High-voltage energy-storage devices are quite commonly needed for robots and dielectric elastomers. This paper presents a flexible high-voltage microsupercapacitor (MSC) with a planar in-series architecture for the first time based on laser-induced graphene. The high-voltage devices are capable of supplying output voltages ranging from a few to thousands of volts. The measured capacitances for the 1, 3, and 6 V MSCs were 60.5, 20.7, and 10.0 μF, respectively, under an applied current of 1.0 μA. After the 5000-cycle charge-discharge test, the 6 V MSC retained about 97.8% of the initial capacitance. It also was recorded that the all-solid-state 209 V MSC could achieve a high capacitance of 0.43 μF at a low applied current of 0.2 μA and a capacitance of 0.18 μF even at a high applied current of 5.0 μA. We further demonstrate the robust function of our flexible high-voltage MSCs by using them to power a piezoresistive microsensor (6 V) and a walking robot (>2000 V). Considering the simple, direct, and cost-effective fabrication method of our laser-fabricated flexible high-voltage MSCs, this work paves the way and lays the foundation for high-voltage energy-storage devices.

Keywords: high voltage; laser-induced graphene; microrobots; microsensors; microsupercapacitors.