Conducting
polymer and carbon nanotube hybrids have been researched
intensively in recent years for electrodes of fiber-shaped supercapacitors
(FSSCs) toward flexible and wearable energy storage devices. Here,
three-dimensional (3D) hierarchical polypyrrole (PPy)/carbon nanotube
fiber (CNTF) architectures have been prepared by a facial electrodeposition
method for flexible FSSC electrodes. PPy nanoparticles, vertically
aligned nanowire arrays (VANAs), and nanowire networks were synthesized
on CNTFs, respectively, to construct three types of 3D architectures
by controlling the electrodeposition condition of PPy. The influence
of the 3D architectures of PPy/CNTF electrodes on the performance
of the assembled quasi-solid-state FSSCs has been carefully studied.
The FSSCs with PPy VANAs showed a much higher specific capacitance
than that with PPy nanoparticles because the hierarchical porous structure
of PPy VANAs provides a higher accessibility of electrolytic ions
and a higher Coulombic efficiency than that with the PPy nanowire
network. The PPy VANA-/CNTF-based FSSCs displayed high flexibility,
stability, and a specific capacitance of 178.14 F g–1 at 0.4 A g–1, which is much higher than that based
on common PPy cauliflower-like film/CNTF electrodes (92.06 F g–1) and pure CNTF electrodes (8.48 F g–1) under the same conditions, demonstrating the great advantages of
the 3D hierarchical structure.
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