RESUMEN
The development of a 3D carbon assembly with a combination of extraordinary electrochemical and mechanical properties is desirable yet challenging. Herein, an ultralight and hyperelastic nanofiber-woven hybrid carbon assembly (NWHCA) is fabricated by nanofiber weaving of isotropic porous and mechanical brittle quasi-aerogels. Upon subsequent pyrolysis, metallogel-derived quasi-aerogel hybridization and nitrogen/phosphorus co-doping are integrated into the NWHCA. Finite element simulation indicates that the 3D lamella-bridge architecture of NWHCA with the quasi-aerogel hybridization contributes to resisting plastic deformation and structural damage under high compression, experimentally demonstrated by complete deformation recovery at 80% compression and unprecedented fatigue resistance (>94% retention after 5000 cycles). Due to the superelasticity and quasi-aerogel integration, the zinc-air battery assembled based on NWHCA shows excellent electrochemical performance and flexibility. A proof-of-concept integrated device is presented, in which the flexible battery powers a piezoresistive sensor, using the NWHCA as the air cathode and the elastic conductor respectively, which can detect full-range and sophisticated motions while attached to human skin. The nanofiber weaving strategy allows the construction of lightweight, superelastic, and multifunctional hybrid carbon assemblies with great potential in wearable and integrated electronics.
RESUMEN
Conductive polymer hydrogels are attractive due to their combination of high theoretical capacitance, intrinsic electrical conductivity, fast ion transport, and high flexibility for supercapacitor electrodes. However, it is challenging to integrate conductive polymer hydrogels into an all-in-one supercapacitor (A-SC) simultaneously with large stretchability and superior energy density. Here, a self-wrinkled polyaniline (PANI)-based composite hydrogel (SPCH) with an electrolytic hydrogel and a PANI composite hydrogel as the core and sheath, respectively, was prepared through a stretching/cryopolymerization/releasing strategy. The self-wrinkled PANI-based hydrogel exhibited large stretchability (â¼970%) and high fatigue resistance (â¼100% retention of tensile strength after 1200 cycles at a 200% strain) ascribing to the formation of the self-wrinkled surfaces and the intrinsic stretchability of hydrogels. Upon cutting off the edge connections, the SPCH could directly work as an intrinsically stretchable A-SC maintaining high energy density (70 µW h cm-2) and stable electrochemical outputs under a stretchability of 500% strain and a full-scale bending of 180°. After 1000 cycles of 100% strain stretching and releasing processes, the A-SC device could deliver highly stable outputs with high capacitance retention of 92%. This study might provide a straightforward method for fabricating self-wrinkled conductive polymer-based hydrogels for A-SCs with highly deformation-tolerant energy storage.