The current design trends in the field of electronic devices involve efforts to make these devices smaller, thinner, lighter, and more flexible. The development of such systems is expected to further accelerate, resulting in the production of wearable and Internet-of-Things devices. In this respect, microenergy storage systems with high capacity and fast charge/discharge rates have become important power sources for such devices. In particular, interdigitated microsupercapacitors (MSCs) have exhibited remarkable potential as micropower sources owing to their fast charge/discharge processes, long cycle life, and high power density compared with microbatteries. Nevertheless, facile fabrication of MSCs using interdigitated electrodes remains challenging, as it requires selective decoration of electrodes with pseudocapacitive materials, such as transition metal oxides, to increase their capacitance. In the present study, we developed a simple method for fabricating MSCs involving in situ formation of interdigitated graphene electrodes and ZnO nanorods by photothermal conversion of graphene oxide (GO) and Zn precursors using infrared (IR) laser scribing. The fabricated MSCs exhibit a high stack capacitance of 3.90 F cm−3 and an energy density of 0.43 mWh cm−3. Notably, the capacity of the developed material is three times higher than those of previously reported MSCs made from the same type of graphene. In addition, the capacitance retention rate of the fabricated MSC is approximately 70% when measured over 10,000 charging–discharging cycles at a constant current, which evidently indicates a stable device performance.
The evolution of "smart life," which connects all internet-of-things (IoT) microdevices and microsensors under wireless communication grids, requires microscale energy storage devices with high power and energy density and long-term cyclability to integrate them with sustainable power generators. Instead of Li-ion batteries with a short lifetime, pseudocapacitors with longer or infinite cyclability and high-power density have been considered as efficient energy storage devices for IoT. However, the design and fabrication of microscale pseudocapacitors have difficulties in patterning microscale electrodes when loading active materials at specific points of the electrodes using conventional microfabrication methods. Here, we developed a facile, one-step fabrication method of micro-supercapacitors (MSCs) through the in situ formation of Co metals and the reduced graphene oxides (rGOs) in a one-pot laser scribing process. The prepared Co/rGO MSC thus exhibited four times higher capacitance than the rGO MSC, due to the Faradaic charge capacitance behavior of the Co/rGO composites.
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