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Low-temperature carbonized MXene/protein-based eggshell membrane composite as free-standing electrode for flexible supercapacitors

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES [2023]
Weimin Chen, Zhao Li, Kai Yang, Daotong Zhang, Min Luo, Yiying Ling, Chaozheng Liu, Xiaoyan Zhou
ABSTRACT

The demerits of the carbonized eggshell membrane (EM), such as high cost, high brittleness, immutable shape and size, greatly limit its application in demanding supercapacitors as free-standing electrode. Herein, the reconstituted EM (REM) with good flexibility and excellent size-customizability is developed, which is due to their fibrous structure and abundant surface polar groups. Ti 3 C 2 nanosheet (a typical MXene) with ultra-high electrical conductivity and good electrochemical activity is then coated on REM surface, and undergoes a low-temperature carbonization (350 °C) to prepare CREM/T. Multi-functions of Ti 3 C 2 are exhibited: (1) constructing a conductive network on REM surface by randomly stacking to yield a high electrical conductivity of 78.1 S cm −1 , (2) being as a protective mold to remain the inherent flexibility and porosity of REM during carbonization, (3) creating nanopores by inducing self-activation, and (4) yielding a large capacitance of 1729 mF cm −2 at 0.5 mA cm −2 and a high rate capability of 82 % after increasing the current density by 50 folds. Furthermore, an all-EM-based supercapacitor is fabricated with REM as the separator and CREM/T as the electrode. It delivers a high energy density of 16.1 μW h cm −2 at 1301 μW cm −2 , and shows stable capacitive behaviors during bending.

MATERIALS

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