Electrochemical Performance of Free-Standing and Flexible Graphene and TiO2 Composites with Different Conductive Polymers as Electrodes for Supercapacitors

Chemistry. 2019 Jun 12;25(33):7903-7911. doi: 10.1002/chem.201900399. Epub 2019 May 15.

Abstract

The advantage of using composite electrode materials for energy storage is, to a large extent, the synergistic role of their components. Our work focuses on the investigation of the interactions of each phase, exploring the patterns found with the change of materials to provide theoretical or experimental foundations for future study. Here, conductive polymers (CPs), including polyaniline (PANi), polypyrrole (PPy), and polythiophene (PTh), as well as reduced graphene oxide (rGO), and TiO2 with the different crystalline phases of anatase and rutile were applied to form a series of free-standing and flexible binary or ternary composite electrodes. The electrochemical behaviors of these composite electrodes are presented. The results indicate that the synergistic improvement in electrochemical performance is due to the incorporation of the different components. CPs significantly increase the current density of these composite films and contribute their pseudocapacitance to improve the specific capacitance, but lead to a decline in cycle stability. After introducing TiO2 , both the specific capacitance and the cycle-stability of rGO-TiO2 -CP were synergistically improved. A CP can magnify the pseudocapacitance behavior of any of the TiO2 crystalline phases, and interactions vary with the specific CP and the specific TiO2 crystalline phase employed. The synergistic effects of the as-prepared composites were theoretically predicted and explored.

Keywords: TiO2; composite electrodes; conductive polymers; electrochemical performance; graphene.